LGA CHIEF SPEAKS ON MALTA AND GAMBLING
22 January 2010
Licensing jurisdiction has 335 operations on
its books, says new chief
Reuben Portanier, who took over as chief executive
officer of Malta's online gambling licensing body the
Lotteries and Gaming Authority (LGA) nine months ago,
has so far maintained a low international profile, but
this week broke out somewhat in an interview with The
Sunday Times newspaper.
Portainier took a
decidedly upbeat stance in the interview, pushing the
LGA's 14-staff presence at the upcoming IGE-ICEi show in
London at the end of this (January) month and claiming
that the prospects for growth in Malta's remote gaming
industry this year are encouraging.
Despite the
poor global economic conditions last year, Malta's
Internet licensing industry continued to grow, the
official said, opining that the trend will continue.
The LGA now has on its books over 335 licences held
by some 250 operators, and in 2009, the remote gaming
sector paid Euro 19 million in gaming duties, up from
Euro 15.6 million the previous year, he revealed.
Portanier claimed that more than half of the entire
exhibition area at the expo will be occupied by entities
or companies with a Maltese connection, including the
LGA itself, participating in ICEi for the seventh time.
"Maltese audit firms, real estate agents,
telecommunication providers, law firms and other
operators will attend. International participants will
include the industry's top operators, regulators, and
service providers," Portanier explained. "The entire i-gaming
ecosystem will be present under one roof; delegates are
able to visit several jurisdictions without having to
travel extensively.
"It is important that
operators seeking to establish their business in Malta
have full visibility of what the local business
environment is like.
"They usually seek
information about the tax regime and business
friendliness; 95 percent of the queries are technical or
legal, but others focus on issues like property prices
and the crime rate."
The official emphasised
Malta's commitment to EU principles of free movement of
goods and services between member nations as a member of
the EU and the Eurozone.
Keeping abreast of
dynamic technology developments is one of the important
challenges that Malta faces as a jurisdiction in the
fast-moving world of Internet gambling, and resources
are devoted to this, he said.
"We are not a
fly-by-night regulator," Portanier emphasised. "We
improve constantly. We ensure that we are in tune with
the technical, legal, European and gaming changes within
the industry. The LGA's 52 staff includes certifiers,
auditors, and legal experts.
"We also have a
network of certifiers from private industry to which we
outsource. This ensures a degree of independence. That
is what helps us react to changes swiftly."
The
regulator oversees a complex industry. The workload of
keeping out unwanted elements like money-laundering and
operators involved in illicit activity, and protecting
vulnerable groups like children, is heavy in an industry
which operates round-the-clock, Portanier told the
Sunday Times.
The LGA collaborates strongly with
the police, other authorities, and banks. Overseas, it
works with Europol, Interpol, and regulators, to carry
out investigations and due diligence procedures.
The LGA has been in detailed consultation with the
online gambling industry on the Mediterranean island
over the past few months, Portanier revealed. It has
accelerated its turnaround time by 27 percent after
stakeholders raised the issue of the backlog in licence
processing, and the LGA has now set itself a target to
speed up the processing period by 40 to 45 percent
without compromising on standards and thoroughness.
Other improvements are also lined up for 2010
following talks with the Malta Remote Gaming Council,
which represents a considerable number of licence
holders. The industry has also forwarded suggestions on
ways to mitigate other issues, particularly limiting
some technological dependencies. Two working committees
are currently winding up their tasks to produce their
findings on technological advances in the next few
weeks.
Another immediate major task for the LGA
is the consolidation of the legal framework, Portanier
told the newspaper. "We have an advisory capacity to the
legislator," he explained. "We are currently going
through a series of reviews. Where there are elements
for swift intervention which are within the authority's
control, we modify technical or procedural policies.
"We [also] participate very actively in all the
European Commission's working groups, expressing our
position at the table."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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