Advertisement

Hong Kong to look into letting teens under 18 attend horse races to boost tourism: culture chief

Culture minister Kevin Yeung says government is in discussions with Jockey Club, while cautioning against cruise sector comparisons with Singapore

Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
22
Crowds at the Sha Tin Racecourse. Hong Kong culture chief Kevin Yeung says authorities have been in discussions with the Jockey Club to promote horse racing tourism. Photo: Sam Tsang

Hong Kong authorities will look into the possibility of relaxing the age restriction to allow teenagers under 18 to attend horse racing events, amid other moves to encourage tourism, the city’s culture chief has said.

Advertisement
Secretary for Culture, Sports and Tourism Kevin Yeung Yun-hung said on Monday that authorities had been in discussions with the Hong Kong Jockey Club and had urged it to use its unique features to boost the city’s attractiveness as a horse racing tourist site.

“In terms of horse racing, not many other regions have been able to reach the scale that we have attained. We also have many international races every year … which can attract many horses, horse owners, and those who love this sport from overseas,” he said in a radio interview.

“We must fully utilise this unique feature. How can we achieve that? We have to strike a balance between many different factors, such as whether [current] age restrictions are necessary. We have to consider it in detail.”

The club said it supported the move to lower the age limit to take horse racing tourism forward, adding that it had stringent underage-access controls across all betting channels.

Advertisement

“The real threat to Hong Kong comes from illegal bookmakers. They do not impose any age restrictions on gamblers, posing a serious threat to responsible gambling,” it said on Monday night.

Advertisement