Jack
Ritchie, from Sheffield, UK (pictured with his mother Liz) committed suicide at
just 24 after battling a gambling addiction
|
●UK families of people who
committed suicide over gambling addiction spoke out ●They want firms to donate
1% of profits and a introduce a £2 maximum stake ●The UK has an estimated
430,000 adult gambling addicts with 1.57m at risk
Gambling operators should
be forced to pay 1%of their profits to help tackle addiction to betting, a new
campaign group has demanded.
Daily
Mail UK report continues:
Bereaved
parents whose children were driven to suicide by despair over gambling debts
have called for the Government to introduce the levy to fund better treatment
for addicts and support for families.
The
group, Gambling With Lives, said addicts were up to three times more likely to
attempt suicide than those fighting other addictions, and needed vastly
improved support.
It
has called for the 1% levy, a maximum £2 stake for online casino and
slot games, and for greater recognition of gambling as a public health issue.
Britain
has an estimated 430,000 adult gambling addicts, with 1.57million more said to
be 'at risk' of developing a real addiction, and experts have warned that a
growing number of children are becoming hooked.
Research
last year by the Gambling Commission found 25,000 11- to 16-year-olds were
'problem gamblers', with another 36,000 deemed 'at risk'.
Liz
Ritchie, whose 24-year-old son Jack killed himself last year after he became
hooked on online betting while still at secondary school, accused gambling
operators of 'grooming' youngsters.
She
told the Mail: 'He was great. But he was groomed by the gambling companies.
These are ordinary children targeted by British companies.'
She
and husband Charles have joined forces with other bereaved parents to form
Gambling With Lives to lobby politicians for a change in the law.
They
want the Government to introduce a statutory levy on operators of at least 1%
of gross profits to pay for research, education and treatment.
The
industry overall made a profit of £13.8billion in the 2015/16 financial year,
meaning under the levy it would have had to donate £138million.
But
under a deal struck with the last Labour government when it deregulated
gambling in 2007, operators are asked for only a 0.1 per cent voluntary
contribution.
The
charity Gamble Aware, which administers the donations and supports Britain's
only specialist clinic for problem gambling, said that in 2016 it received just
£8million, which rose to £9million last year.
A
spokesman added: 'We would like to see the introduction of a statutory levy, as
there has been a consistent shortfall in funding.'
Conservative
peer Lord Chadlington, who has campaigned for tougher controls for online
gambling, said he would support the 1% levy.
He
added: 'We are on the lip of a gambling epidemic, and the industry must step up
and take some responsibility for this.
'There should be a 1% mandatory levy on all gambling profits which would generate over £130million a year. That's how we will avert this imminent epidemic.'
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