RUSSIAN ROUSTING
14 August 2009
Not a good idea to continuing operating in
new gambling regime
Russian gambling operators who have been trying to find
workarounds for the draconian anti-gambling measures
introduced last month by the government (see previous
InfoPowa reports) are coming under increasing pressure
to close shop, with extensive police raids in major
cities now common.
The St Petersburg Times
reported this week that the city’s police arrested the
owner of an illegal gambling venue and detained another
owner as they continued to target illegal gambling spots
following a Kremlin order restricting gambling to four
remote and undeveloped areas of the vast country.
Police reported that some operators have attempted
to disguise their venues as lottery centres. In St
Petersburg, the city police have confiscated more than 3
300 pieces of gambling equipment from illegally
operating venues during the past week alone, and at
least 500 venues were raided last week, resulting in
four criminal cases and 10 administrative cases.
The newspaper reports that: "Russian law on lotteries is
at present full of loopholes and so vague that it does
not even contain a consistent description of what
constitutes lottery facilities. Some businessmen are
using this lack of legal clarity to their short-term
advantage, classifying slot-machines and other
facilities as lottery systems."
However, the
police have warned that they will continue to crack down
on illegal gambling venues on a regular basis until the
situation on the gambling market becomes stable.
Stability may not come for months, however, as governors
of the territories set aside by central government as
permissible gambling areas have admitted that they are
not ready to receive investors and would have to rely
heavily on state support to bring infrastructures up to
developmental requirements.
Deputy Finance
Minister Sergei Shatalov said the allocated zones are
not yet ready to receive an avalanche of gamblers and
gambling businesses. They are suffering from the
economic crisis, and there is no infrastructure in these
areas to facilitate the smooth transfer of hundreds of
casinos.
Critics of the gambling reform process
speculate that the law will only result in a massive
boost of illegally operating private gambling houses.
Dmitry Nevelsky, head of the St. Petersburg Association
of Gambling Businesses, said few businesses will risk
relocation during the instability of the crisis, nor
would they find it worthwhile investing far from their
hometowns.
Nevelsky added that owners of gambling
businesses in Russia have found themselves at a loss as
to where to turn to keep their casinos afloat.
“The European market is tightly packed and the chances
for Russian businesses to squeeze themselves in are less
than scarce,” said Nevelsky. “Nearby Belarus is not an
option either, because the moods of the country’s leader
are unpredictable.”
It is further argued that few
Russians will want to travel to gambling zones remote
from the main centres of population, and are therefore
more likely to seek out a local underground venue.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|