LATE CHANGES TO FRENCH DRAFT EXCLUDE BETTING
EXCHANGES (Update)
9 October 2009
Betfair unlikely to be pleased with latest
news from France
The French draft law to liberalise the gambling industry
in that country is currently being debated by the
National Assembly (see previous InfoPowa reports), but
news of late amendments to the draft is unlikely to
please online betting exchange giant Betfair.
The
surprise amendment to the new gambling laws effectively
bans betting exchanges, reports The Guardian newspaper
in the UK, and this could have implications for other
countries like Britain, where sporting bodies are known
to be hostile to the betting exchange concept and may
lobby for similar legislation.
Sports
administrators, including the England and Wales Cricket
Board's chief executive, David Collier, and his
counterpart at the British Horseracing Authority, Nic
Coward, last month met the sports minister, Gerry
Sutcliffe, to advance their case.
Betfair, which
has over 2 million punters on its books, has described
the amendment as 'discriminatory.'
France's new
law draft apparently requires not only that operators be
licensed, but that the successful companies also agree
to pay almost 2 percent of revenues to the improvement
of anti-corruption measures in sport. Operators will
also be expected to negotiate separate licences with
each sport they want to offer bets on.
Online
betting exchanges will not be able to apply for one of
the new licences after it was ruled that allowing
punters to lay bets contradicted this principle.
Passing the amendment, the French parliament referred to
a British report that 9.8 percent of punters using
betting exchanges developed gambling addictions,
compared to a rate of between one and three percent
among the general gambling population.
Betfair's
managing director, Mark Davies, told The Guardian: "We
will consider our position. It is fairly clearly
discriminatory against the biggest and most competitive
online operator in Europe. It is a slap in the face for
the consumer."
The company also disputes the
figures in the report, which it said were based on such
a small sample that they were close to meaningless.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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