FRANCE GEARING UP FOR ONLINE GAMBLING (Update)
18 April 2008
Major new policy now evolving
The French daily newspaper Aujourd’hui en France has
confirmed earlier reports in Le Parisien (see previous
InfoPowa reports) that France is moving toward the
regulation rather than prohibition of online gambling,
perhaps as early as 2009. The newspapers report that
“everything is ready” for France to initiate discussions
on its proposed framework for online gaming and betting.
In current moves, former MP Bruno Durieux handed in the
results of a study he carried out on online gambling for
the French finance inspectorate at the end of last week,
and President Nicolas Sarkozy is expected to give his
final approval for the policy shift in the near future.
President Sarkozy has displayed a more open mind to a
competitive betting market in France, and Budget
Minister Eric Woerth and other French government
representatives have held talks with European Commission
officials in Brussels this year.
Woerth disclosed earlier this week that the president
favours a controlled approach to opening up the market,
ensuring that competition is even and balanced.
The timeframe for “a new era in online gaming and
betting” is thought to be towards the end of “2009 or
early in 2010”, according to Woerth.
Reports suggest that France intends to develop a new
“system” for online gaming and betting in partnership
with other EU states such as Belgium, Germany and
Holland, rather than adopt existing models such as those
in the UK or Italy. An initial steering committee will
gather at the end of April to move this agenda forward.
At a national level, operators will have to be licensed
to offer their services in France and conform to the
system, with strict guidelines relating to money
laundering and player protection.
In his latest disclosures, Minister Woerth said that
France was not acting under threat from the European
Commission (which has engaged with the French on the
country's monopolistic gambling policy) but to address
the changes brought in by technological developments and
the Internet. He added that horse racing betting had to
evolve, but he would not allow fixed-odds betting
products to be offered on the sport.
For other sports such as football, fixed-odds bets would
be offered, but Woerth added: “A sports bet is not
betting on the colour of a tennis player’s jersey. The
bet must be linked to the sporting performance, if not
it can be the source of all kinds of dubious activity.”
The French government would also expect to share in
betting revenues by way of taxes, he added.
Regarding online casino and poker gaming, these
activities will be licensed, although further study is
necessary, Woerth said. Slot machines are for now at
least not approved on grounds that these types of
gambling were thought to be too addictive, the minister
said.
Formerly one of the most aggressive opponents of any
competition to its state gambling monopolies, France
along with 9 other recalcitrant EU nations has been
under increasing pressure from the European Commission,
which is determined to enforce European Union
requirements that member nations in the trading bloc
permit free passage of goods and services with other
members.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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