ONLINE GAMBLING INDUSTRY COUNTERATTACKS
2 October 2009
Claims that relocation of major online
gambling sites will increase the risk of UK match-fixing
are spurious says RGA
The online gambling industry has come out with guns
firing following uninformed claims in the British press
this week that UK sports face an increased threat of
match-fixing as a result of the relocation offshore of
major Internet gambling groups like William Hill Online
and Ladbrokes.
The CEO of William Hill, Ralph
Topping has already debunked the claims (see earlier
InfoPowa report) and Clive Hawkswood, chief exec of the
Remote Gaming Association has joined the fray,
challenging the allegations and describing them as
'bizarre.'
Hawkswood, who heads a trade
association to which most major British online gambling
groups belong, says that the moves offshore by Ladbrokes
and William Hill Online were purely commercial decisions
motivated by the need to better compete in a highly
competitive global industry.
Online betting is a
global operation facing global challenges and is not
(nor ever was) solely focused on British sport, he
remarked.
Following on from this, it is a
fallacy to suggest that betting operators combat
integrity threats because they are compelled to,
Hawkswood said, pointing out that operators do so
because it is crucial to the safe running of their
business.
And, Hawkswood commented, the [UK]
Gambling Commission does not have a monopoly on good
regulation.
The RGA chief stressed that
reputable betting operators have been making a
significant investment in integrity mechanisms to assist
sports for some considerable time, and will continue to
do so.
"Operators have a significant interest in
this area; what harms sport likewise harms operators,
both in financial and reputation terms. There is,
therefore, a mutual interest, and the fact that
operators are based abroad makes no difference in that
respect," he said.
Hawkswood ended with a stiff
condemnation of "those who wildly, and inaccurately,
speculate that betting presents as great a risk to sport
as doping", saying that the comments in the press have
no foundation and do nothing to focus the discussion
about what is an essentially commercially forced move.
William Hill's CEO had earlier explained that the
relocation of the company's online activities to
Gibraltar had been largely motivated by the burden on
its competitiveness which the UK gambling tax of 15
percent and horseracing levies of a further 10 percent
constituted.
Hawkswood revealed that the RGA is
presently conducting a consultation on sports betting,
and has invited a number of national and international
sporting bodies to respond.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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