EUROPEAN COMMISSION TAKES UP ONLINE GAMBLING
SPONSORSHIP CASE
4 May 2007
Brussels to the rescue in banned Tour cyclists
issue
According to reports in the Financial Times in Britain,
the Tour de France cycle race has been hit by
controversy not over drugs but gambling, with a team
banned for being sponsored by an online bookmaker. And
the European Commission is taking an interest in the
issue.
The Malta-based Unibet team was barred by the race
organisers as a result of the restrictive gaming laws
imposed by France. Following the ban, Charlie McCreevy,
the internal market commissioner, has written to lawyers
of the Green Cycle team and the International Cycling
Union, the sport's governing body, pledging his support.
The FT reports that McCreevy is already taking the
French government to court for protecting its national
gambling monopolies against online competition, and said
he would seek to broaden the case to include the cycling
restriction.
"Mr McCreevy detects more that a whiff of hypocrisy,
given that the biggest backer of the tour is the PMU,
the French horseracing monopoly, which encourages bets
on the race," observes the newspaper in reporting the
incident.
"The consistency of the French approach is highly
questionable, given that other teams sponsored by gaming
operators in France, such as the Française des jeux, are
permitted to participate and given that the main sponsor
of the event is in fact a gaming operator, the PMU,"
says the letter, seen by the Financial Times. The
Belgian national lottery also has a team, he adds.
Green Cycle, which joined the professional tour this
year, was banned from two races through the Belgian
Ardennes this month by Amaury Sports Organisation, which
also stages the Tour de France, even though it had
offered to remove the Unibet logo from its jerseys. It
is suing for Euro 5 million ($6.8 million, GBP 3.4
million) in damages.
ASO says that permitting the team to race would leave it
vulnerable to prosecution in France for aiding and
abetting illegal gambling.
"It's as if they said in a bar, 'beer is dangerous if
you drink the other fellow's brand but not if you drink
my brand'," said McCreevy's spokesman. "States are free
to control gambling but it must not be discriminatory."
McCreevy also objects to France's flexing its muscle
beyond its borders. The Tour de France runs through the
UK and Belgium and is broadcast worldwide.
"The French state is trying to extend its cosy
arrangement to other countries," said the spokesman.
McCreevy has launched a crackdown on online gambling
restrictions in a dozen EU countries after a series of
European court judgments, most recently against Italy.
Many EU countries have laws that favour traditional
state lotteries over newcomers such as internet
bookmakers. Charlie McCreevy, the internal market
commissioner for the EU, launched cases against a dozen
member states in October after complaints from companies
and punters. If the European Court of Justice finds in
his favour, laws will have to change.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
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