The Asian Age

Scratchcar­d lottery craze grips Bulgaria

- — AFP

Tsurkva, Bulgaria: Armed with a coin, 96- year- old Stoyan Stoimenov from the small village of Tsurkva outside Sofia hunches over and tries his luck on yet another scratchcar­d. “I tell myself: ‘ I will win again.’ It’s not very likely but who knows,” he says, winking. Stoimenov is just one of thousands of Bulgarians who have been gripped by a craze for scratchcar­ds in recent years in the EU’s poorest member state, with some now raising the alarm over the dangers of widespread addiction. In February, Stoimenov won 5,000 leva ( 2,500 euros, $ 3,000) — roughly 25 times his monthly pension — and distribute­d his prize among his children, grandchild­ren and great- grandchild­ren. They thanked him by giving him more scratchcar­ds for his 96th birthday on May 6. In the small cafe where Stoimenov won his prize, the tables are full of fellow gamblers. “I sell more scratchcar­ds than anything else,” the girl at the counter says. Critics say that the law has not kept pace with the explosion of scratchcar­d gambling, with even children allowed to participat­e with no age restrictio­n. “I play from time to time but there’s a boy in my class who does nothing but buy scratchcar­ds,” says 10- yearold Denislav, while buying a two- leva ticket with his daily lunch money. According to an expert study, commission­ed by a government body in July 2016 in Bulgaria’s northwest — the EU’s poorest region — 10 per cent of high school students buy scratchcar­ds every day and 11 per cent buy them once a week. The country is thought by experts to have the second biggest gambling industry in the EU behind Malta. Some politician­s are now pushing for action to curb the phenomenon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India