Zelenskyy positively responds to a petition calling to ban online casinos during martial law
The petition gathered 26,000 signatures in one day. It said online casinos negatively influence soldiers.
The petition’s author was a serviceman from the 59th Brigade, Pavlo Petrychenko. According to the petition, online casinos negatively influence some soldiers who lose large sums of money there amid high stress.
According to Ukraine’s National Bank, Ukrainians spent nearly UAH 150 billion ($3.9 billion) in gambling in 2023. Not all this sum was lost, of course, but only the declared profit of casinos was UAH 6.9 billion ($180 million), while the real profit is estimated to be significantly higher.
A large part of gamers includes soldiers, who receive high salaries but are psychologically vulnerable due to stress and don’t have where to spend money on the frontline.
“Military personnel have been away from their families for the third year, in stressful conditions and without the possibility of full rest, so they are especially psychologically vulnerable. For many of them, gambling becomes the only way to cope with stress, and therefore, quickly causes dopamine addiction and weakens their self-control. The cases when game-addicted servicemen spend all their income on games and take microloans are not rare. This leads to putting themselves and their families in a “debt trap” or pawning drones and thermal imagers, thereby harming not only themselves but also their comrades,” the author of the petition, serviceman from the 59th Brigade Pavlo Petrychenko, wrote.
After Ukrainians supported the petition in a record term, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy instructed officials to gather analytical data on the prevalence and impact of online gambling platforms on Ukrainian society and propose solutions in response to a petition.
In his evening video address, Zelenskyy stated that he had tasked the head of the Security Service of Ukraine, the State Special Communications Service, the Ministry of Digital Transformation, and the secretary of the National Security and Defense Council with providing him with comprehensive analytics on the issue and proposing solutions by next week.
The petition calls for President Zelenskyy to initiate a bill that would prohibit gambling and access to online casinos for military personnel during martial law. It also proposes banning the advertising of gambling using the symbols of the Armed Forces of Ukraine or any related symbols or objects associated with war and the army.
Furthermore, the petition suggests prohibiting charitable foundations from collaborating with gambling market participants and banning military units from accepting property as charitable assistance from gambling market participants. Additionally, it emphasizes the need to oblige Internet providers and mobile operators to block websites of illegal casinos.
Read also:
- Ukraine’s Army Chief Syrskyi: the need to mobilize 500,000 troops significantly reduced after audit
- “No US aid, no choice but retreat,” Zelenskyy warns
- Russia targets more power plants as Ukraine downs 58/60 explosive drones, 26/39 missiles
- Ukraine’s government will cut payments to internally displaced people from war zones
- This winter, 32 Ukrainian POWs were executed by Russian forces, UN report reveals
- Ukraine’s budget allocates over $2 billion for arms production in 2024
- Russia plans 68% increase in 2024 military spending, surpassing Ukraine’s defense budget 2.5 times
- Ukraine’s Army Chief names the number of Ukrainian POWs during Avdiivka withdrawal
You could close this page. Or you could join our community and help us produce more materials like this.
We keep our reporting open and accessible to everyone because we believe in the power of free information. This is why our small, cost-effective team depends on the support of readers like you to bring deliver timely news, quality analysis, and on-the-ground reports about Russia's war against Ukraine and Ukraine's struggle to build a democratic society.
A little bit goes a long way: for as little as the cost of one cup of coffee a month, you can help build bridges between Ukraine and the rest of the world, plus become a co-creator and vote for topics we should cover next. Become a patron or see other ways to support.