MORE DELAYS IN SOUTH AFRICAN ONLINE GAMBLING
REGULATION (Update)
20 November 2009
National Gambling Board is still 'developing
its IT skills'
The sluggish progress of the South African government's
initiative to legalise and license online gambling in
the country (see previous InfoPowa reports) remains
bogged down in legal and technical issues and is
unlikely to be implemented in the immediate future, it
appears.
In a review of progress this week, the
publication ITWeb reports that loopholes in the law
exist and IT systems, which could curb fraudulent
activities, are not in place.
After extensive
research, in 2008 the SA government finally passed
amendments to the National Gambling Act allowing for the
implementation of a regulatory and licensing regime for
interactive gambling.
However, in August, the
Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Trade and Industry
requested that the implementation of the regulations be
delayed. Following the publishing of regulations for
public comment in February 2009, the department
acknowledged that the legislation needed to be reviewed.
Meanwhile, government delegations travelled to
various international online gambling jurisdictions to
study their practices and infrastructure.
Currently, Parliament and the Department of Trade and
Industry (DTI) are holding public hearings on
interactive gambling regulations and will only table the
final Bill once hearings have been completed.
DTI
spokesmen have revealed that the National Gambling Board
(NGB) will be tasked with monitoring all the operators,
but that it is still “developing its IT skills to handle
this concern”.
The NGB has put measures in place
to deal with illegal activities, such as the problems of
cloning and hacking, but the DTI is concerned the
measures are not “sufficient and strong enough”.
"While the National Gambling Act introduced measures to
deal with illegal activities, through an umbrella
provision prohibiting such actions, there were loopholes
with regards to interactive gambling," ITWeb observes.
"The legislation needed to be amended to deal with
specifics, such as software tampering, cyber crime and
money laundering, the DTI says."
DTI officials
have informed Parliament that players would be protected
against the negative effects of gambling, but that the
regulations supporting the amended Gambling Act would
also focus on the prevention of criminal acts like money
laundering.
Officials said that licensed
operators would have to comply with Financial
Intelligence Centre Act stipulations, as they would be
in possession of important personal information. The Act
requires that players must disclose personal details,
such as ID number and proof of residential address.
Players would have to create an account linked to a
credit card or cheque account and present a bank stamp,
as no cash transactions would be allowed. A maximum of
Rands 20 000 would be allowed in the individual player's
account.
“Gambling operators would be required to
meet all these requirements, but the department and the
NGB have the biggest responsibility and we are currently
preparing ourselves for it,” says the DTI.
The
NGB initially plans to issue only 10 interactive
gambling licences, all of them on a national level to
operators that can prove they have a physical presence
locally, and all financial transactions would also have
to be located within the country's borders.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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