The employees are thought to include local staff
and three Australians.
Australian
media report that a "co-ordinated police operation"
targeted marketing activities of Crown, owned by billionaire James Packer.
The people held are reportedly from the sales and
marketing division and include a senior executive.
The 15 non-Australian employees detained are
understood to be local employees at Chinese cities including Beijing and
Shanghai.
Casino gambling is illegal in China, except in
the former Portuguese colony of Macau.
Crown Resorts has interests there. For years it
has skirted the question of how to advertise these gambling resorts in the rest
of China by merely advertising the areas they are in.
"Crown believes that a number of our
employees in China are being questioned by local authorities," a company
spokeswoman said. "At this time we can provide no further details."
It is not known whether any of the 18 arrested
people have been charged with anything.
Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and
Trade issued a statement saying: "The Australian Government is aware of
reports of the possible detention of a number of Crown International Group
employees across China, including three Australians.
"Consular officials are seeking to confirm
these reports with the relevant Chinese authorities."
A corruption crackdown initiated by Chinese
President Xi Jinping has made many people, particularly government officials,
wary of being seen with too much cash, and revenue in Macau's casinos fell by
more than a third last year.
Source| BBC
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