Britons Arrested As Army Raids Bridge Club

Twelve British bridge players have been arrested after police and the army raided their club as part of a gambling crackdown in Thailand.

Officials targeted the three times a week gathering in Pattaya, a resort town known for seedy go-go bars and organised crime links, after the country’s anti-corruption centre received a complaint from a member of the public.

Photos showed members sipping water and beers held in plastic coolers moments before stern officials dressed in military uniform shut down the game in a rented apartment above a bar.

Even though the club’s chairman explained the group were playing for points rather than money, 32 foreigners were arrested for gambling, Pattaya police superintendent Colonel Suthat Pumphanmuang told AFP.

They were packed into pick-up trucks and carted off to jail, but all but one was freed on 5,000 baht (£96) bail after 12 hours in custody. The final person was unable to pay bail and remains in jail, police said.

Police said those arrested included 12 British nationals, three Norwegians, three Swedes, two Australians, a German, a Dane, a Canadian, a New Zealander and a Dutch and Irish national. The other nationalities were not made public.

A British Embassy spokesman said officials were in contact with local authorities “following the arrest of several British nationals”.

The Pattaya One newspaper reported the group were arrested under an obscure section of the 1935 Playing Cards Act, which states that an individual is not allowed to possess more than 120 playing cards at any one time.

Computers, decks of cards and a book with results of the bridge games were seized by officers as evidence.

A message on the website of the Jomtien and Pattaya Bridge Club, which has reportedly been operating bridge nights since 1994, said it was temporarily closed “whilst we get a licence to have cards on the premises”.

Since seizing power in 2014, Thai junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha has vowed to crackdown on a raft of social ills including corruption and criminal networks, both foreign and domestic.

He has set up a corruption centre where members of the public can inform officials of alleged abuses or crimes.

The Immigration Bureau recently rolled out a new slogan: “Good guys in, bad guys out”.