'CHARITY' LOTTERIES THE LATEST WHEEZE IN MOSCOW
30 October 2009
The gambling ban has spawned another
workaround
The Moscow Times reports that gambling operators are
still determinedly trying to circumvent the government's
ban on gambling in the city, with the latest wheeze
being touch screen console offerings which purportedly
are lotteries supporting unspecified charities.
The workaround is based on a loophole in the law which
permits lotteries on electronic terminals provided that
at least 10 percent of the proceeds go to a charity.
The loophole has spawned a whole new range of
terminals in what were formerly slot parlours and
gambling establishments throughout the city.
The
Moscow Times reports that industry sources and
government officials claim the 'lottery clubs' are often
operating well outside the law, and federal and regional
authorities have complained that the industry must be
better regulated and policed, something that legislative
efforts have thus far failed to do effectively and
comprehensively.
Operators are desperate to find
new ways to sustain their businesses, badly hurt by a
Russian law implemented in July this year which limits
gambling to four remote and undeveloped areas of the
country, far removed from comfortable urban
environments.
Following an initial blitz which
saw 525 gambling venues closed by the authorities,
Russian operators have been deploying online gaming and
other ruses to get past the ban. The government closed
one loophole - poker - when it withdrew the game's
accreditation as a recognised Russian sport (see
previous InfoPowa reports).
The rapid
proliferation of electronic lottery terminals, however,
has been a harder nut to crack. Lotteries have to be
licensed by tax authorities and transfer no less than 10
percent of their revenues to charity funds each quarter.
The prize fund must be no less than 50 percent of
revenue and no greater than 80 percent.
However,
lottery club terminals rarely specify a charity. And
terminal makers are not shy about advertising the
profits that the “lottery business” can make.
“Lottery machines [terminals] can bring a noticeable
profit to their owners, although they are, above all,
intended to develop socially focused charity work,”
ENGY, a payment and lottery terminal maker, says on its
web site. “At the present, there are no legal
limitations on the lottery business that prohibit
obtaining or distributing tickets through self-service
lottery devices.”
The company’s terminals sell
for between 87,000 rubles and 120,000 rubles ($3,000 to
$4,100), according to its web site. The firm also breaks
down a “business plan” for potential buyers, which says
the terminals can become profitable within half a year,
with 150 transactions per day averaging 100 rubles each.
The problem is not confined to Moscow. The governor
of St. Petersburg, Valentina Matviyenko, wrote to Prime
Minister Putin in June to express her concern about the
spread of lottery facilities that “look like gambling
machines and have the same operating principle,”
Kommersant reports.
The loopholes for lotteries
may be short-lived; Putin has directed the Russian
Finance Ministry to develop amendments, and these are
being discussed with the Interior, Economic Development
and Industry and Trade ministries.
But additional
regulation on lotteries could face opposition from some
lawmakers, says the Moscow Times, quoting Yevgeny
Fyodorov, who chairs the Duma’s Economic Policy and
Entrepreneurship Committee, and sees no reason for
additional legislation.
“If we saw violations, we
would make a move. But there has been no law enforcement
experience so far that shows the law needs to be
amended,” Fyodorov said. “Lottery terminals themselves
pose no danger, but gambling machines disguised as
lottery machines do.”
About one-third of former
Moscow casinos and slot machine halls that were closed
in July are now selling instant lottery tickets. In
addition “surrogate technologies,” namely lottery
terminals and Internet clubs providing access to online
gambling are appearing widely.
Moscow has 91
registered Internet clubs, six bookmakers, 42 lottery
clubs and 51 stand-alone lottery terminals.
The
police have closed 35 such places, opened 17 criminal
cases and seized 618 lottery terminals, and the city
shuts down about four so-called lottery clubs every
week, said Filipp Zolotnitsky, a spokesman for the
Moscow police’s economic crimes department.
In an
apparent effort to stem the growing outcry, 36 lottery
companies last week signed an agreement to create a
self-regulating body for the industry. Terminal makers
and organisers say electronic lotteries are no different
a from traditional one, and that they have nothing to do
with gambling.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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