RUSSIAN CASINO BAN COULD COST 400 000 JOBS (Update)
3 July 2009
Mainstream media locks on to unfolding
Russian drama
The online gambling media may have been following the
story for months, but the draconian Russian ban on
casinos in major cities has now caught the attention of
the mainstream media in America, with the New York Times
carrying a major story over the weekend.
Recapping on events, in 2006 Russian strongman Vladimir
Putin decided that gambling in Russian should be
confined only to four remote geographical regions: the
Altai region of Siberia; the coastal area of the Far
East, near the border with North Korea and China;
Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave between Poland and
Lithuania; and the Azov Sea region in the south.
Existing casinos and slots parlours in major cities like
Moscow and St Petersburg (see previous InfoPowa reports)
were warned that the ban would come into effect on July
1st 2009, although few thought that the government would
carry the law through in the long run.
Early this
(June) month they were disabused of that notion as the
police started moving in, and a mass clear out of
gambling operations is currently in full swing.
The result is that Russia will be one of the few
countries in Europe without legal gambling facilities
until the new locations are up and running - likely to
take at least two years given the remote nature of the
relocations.
There is also the possibility that
gambling in the main population centres will go
underground, although the penalties for that will be
stiff, and government has already warned that it will be
merciless in imposing the new laws and punitive
measures.
The NY Times article reports that
casinos have repeatedly asked for a reprieve, proposing
a regulatory body to cut down on abuses, and more
recently pointing out that the ban will create hardships
for workers during the crisis. The industry has also
said it pays more than $1 billion a year in taxes. But
Putin and his protégé, President Dmitri A. Medvedev,
have not yielded.
“The rules will not be revised
in any way,” Medvedev said last month, “and there will
be no backsliding, although various business
organisations have been lobbying for precisely this.”
The Russian gambling industry says the ban will
leave more than 400 000 people without work in Russia,
at a time when it has been hard hit by the economic
downturn: the World Bank predicts the economy will
contract by 7.9 percent this year. The government
disagrees, publicising its own estimate of 60 000
people, which independent industry analysts say is
absurdly low.
Since the law was passed in 2006
little has been done by either regional authorities or
the gambling industry to prepare for the huge move to
the specified regions, probably because there were few
who believed that such radical change would be insisted
upon.
“You know, in our country, the decisions
are made by only one person,” Samuil Binder, deputy
executive director of the Russian Association for Gaming
Business Development told the New York Times. He was
referring to Putin.
The article examines the
development of the Russian gambling industry following
the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, when gambling
sprang up everywhere in Russia, from first-class
locations in Moscow to side-alley hangouts in the
provinces.
"The crazy-quilt growth was something
of a metaphor for capitalism here, full of possibilities
and schemes and corruption," says the report.
The
industry has been largely unregulated, and especially in
recent years, almost anyone could get a license, for as
little as $50. Russia is not a strait-laced place —
rates of smoking and drinking are high — but an outcry
about gambling ensued. “It is not only young people, but
also retirees who lose their last kopecks and pensions
through gambling,” Putin said in 2006.
As with
the workers, it seems to have dawned on the gamblers
themselves only recently that the casinos are closing.
“It is going to be strange, and even now, it’s hard
to believe,” said Aleksei Ustinenko (29) a construction
executive who was playing at the Shangri-La casino in
Moscow.
“Here we are, in one of the biggest, most
beautiful, most expensive cities in the world,” he said.
“And yet other people can decide that I cannot gamble if
I want to.”
Some casinos have said they might try
to devote some of the vacated space to private poker
clubs, which they believe will be allowed under the law.
But executives say such clubs are far less lucrative,
and will employ very few workers.
And so
labourers have been pulling down gambling signs and
carting slot machines from sites all over Moscow.
“There was a time when all these clubs and casinos
grew like a cancer tumor,” said Moscow’s mayor, Yuri M.
Luzhkov. “We will close them all. By July 1, Moscow will
be clean.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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