Editorial | As Hong Kong hosts more mega-events, a tougher crackdown on scalping is needed

The demand-supply imbalance in tickets for concerts and other popular shows often breeds scalping activities. It also sets the stage for scammers taking advantage of desperate fans scrambling for tickets at inflated prices. The Hong Kong authorities must strengthen the law and enforcement as the newly commissioned stadium in Kai Tak and other venues draw more mega-events to the city.

In the latest crackdown, the Hong Kong and Shenzhen police smashed a cross-border syndicate and arrested 12 people for allegedly scamming victims out of more than HK$100,000 (US$12,740) with fake tickets for shows by K-pop star G-Dragon and Cantopop singer G.E.M. The eight people arrested in Hong Kong were involved in at least 16 instances of sales, with the largest case valued at HK$23,000.

This may just be the tip of the iceberg. Hong Kong police earlier said a woman was conned out of HK$180,000 on the promise of tickets for G-Dragon’s concerts at the AsiaWorld-Arena in Lantau. She was one of nearly 30 victims cheated out of over HK$610,000 for the three shows. Tickets had been priced between HK$799 and HK$2,399. The force has received more than 200 reports of related swindles since mid-July, accounting for 40 per cent of all online shopping scam cases. In May, fans of Cantopop singer Nicholas Tse Ting-fung reported losses of over HK$900,000 from suspected ticket scams linked to the star’s concerts at the Kai Tak Stadium.

The government’s pursuit of economic growth through staging mega-events has been enhanced following the opening of the 50,000-seat stadium. But it also gives fraudsters more room to exploit. While there are legal tools to punish offences such as conspiracy to defraud, possession of false instruments and obtaining property by deception, scalping is only liable to a HK$2,000 fine under the Places of Public Entertainment Ordinance.

Ticket scams are damaging to the interests of consumers, the relevant industries as well as the city’s image as Asia’s capital of mega-events. A more forceful crackdown may not necessarily address all the underlying issues contributing to problems with ticket sales, but it will at least make purchases fair and safe.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

A leading European fans' group says Italy's Serie A should cancel the planned league match scheduled to be played in Australia in early 2026 (pictured, AC Milan midfielder Luka Modric)

Why prominent European football fans want to see the historic Serie A clash between AC Milan and Como in Perth next February CANCELLED

Scheduled to be played February 8 at Optus Stadium Prominent supporters group want the game played in Italy WA government remains confident fixture will go ahead By IAN CHADBAND FOR AUSTRALIAN ASSOCIATED PRESS and ANDREW PRENTICE, SPORT REPORTER, AUSTRALIA Published: 00:10 BST, 23 October 2025 | Updated: 00:18 BST, 23 October 2025 A leading European

Source: AI-found images

Hong Kong Urges Schools to Strengthen Influenza Prevention Amid Rising Severe Pediatric Cases

DH urges schools to implement preventive measures and manage influenza outbreaks according to Guidelines on Prevention of Communicable Diseases as severe paediatric influenza infection case was recorded for three consecutive days The Centre for Health Protection (CHP) of the Department of Health (DH) today (October 22) recorded another severe paediatric influenza infection cases, the third

Judge gives Trump admin a basic sex ed lesson while rebuking its planned funding cuts

Judge gives Trump admin a basic sex ed lesson while rebuking its planned funding cuts

A federal judge said Monday that she’ll likely block the Trump administration’s efforts to withhold billions of dollars in federal funding for sexual health education grants. The revelation came as the judge reportedly reprimanded the administration and gave it a basic sex ed lesson from the bench. I’ve written previously on the administration’s bigoted rationale

Anthony Albanese and Donald Trump hold up signed documents in front of flags

The move to break China’s iron grip on world’s supply of critical minerals

If there is any mystery over America’s historic agreement to partner with Australia this week on the supply of critical minerals, it is why it took so long. On April 4, just two days after Donald Trump’s much-touted Liberation Day tariffs panicked investors and sent markets into a tailspin, Beijing retaliated with its own ferocious

The FCDO urged British travellers to exercise caution, advising them to avoid locally brewed or unlabelled spirits

UK issues travel alert over fake alcohol risk in Nigeria, Kenya and six other nations

The United Kingdom’s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) has issued a renewed travel advisory warning its citizens about the growing risk of methanol poisoning from counterfeit or tainted alcoholic drinks in eight countries, including Nigeria and Uganda. The updated alert highlights a broader public health concern as fake products proliferate in low-income markets with

Trump's past demand that the DOJ pay him $230 million is part of a bigger plan

Trump’s past demand that the DOJ pay him $230 million is part of a bigger plan

I thought there was little President Donald Trump could do to surprise me. I was wrong. The New York Times reported Tuesday that “President Trump is demanding that the Justice Department pay him about $230 million in compensation for the federal investigations into him.” The two claims were filed in 2023 and 2024 under the

Brandi Vincent

As China advances, Congress wants DOD to get up to speed on biotechnology 

Pentagon personnel could soon be told to participate in new training programs designed to prepare them for anticipated advancements in biotechnology and its convergence with other critical and emerging technologies, like quantum computing and AI. House lawmakers recently passed an amendment en bloc in their version of the fiscal 2026 National Defense Authorization Act that