Sports fans around the world have been swindled by an international Internet scam which offered thousands of bogus tickets for the Beijing Games, officials said yesterday.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) announced it was taking action to shut down the fraudsters, but the move came too late to help the victims find replacement seats at the Games.

Among those left out of pocket were the families of Olympic athletes in both Australia and New Zealand, with people in the US, Japan, Norway, China and Britain also conned by the sophisticated sting.

"We cannot accept people paying money for tickets and not getting them," said Gerhard Heiberg, an IOC executive board member.

Heiberg said the issue was raised last week, with both the IOC and the United States Olympic Committee filing a lawsuit on Friday in a district court in California, accusing at least six websites of selling illegitimate or non-existent tickets.

However, a US lawyer who said he had lost $12,000 in the fraud, accused the IOC of complacency.

"They have known about these sites for months and months and did nothing," said Jim Moriarty, the partner of a Houston-based law firm which is looking to represent fellow victims in any subsequent legal actions.

"They have dashed the hopes and dreams of thousands of people who have been planning for years to go the Games, and have already paid thousands of dollars for airfare and what they thought were legitimate tickets," he told Reuters.

Despite last week's IOC suit, one of the sites accused of fraud - www.beijingticketing.com - was still operating yesterday, offering seats for numerous events, including Friday's opening ceremony, with prices topping $2,150.

The professional-looking site, which carries the official Beijing Games logo, provides a London phone number, which rang dead yesterday, and a US address in Phoenix, Arizona.

The press reported that some Australian nationals had been swindled out of almost $45,000. Moriarty said one unnamed individual had lost $57,000.

Tickets for events in host city Beijing completely sold out last week, Games organisers said, leaving only seats for competitions in co-host cities still available.

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