Jamaica Gleaner

Don’t let Tapia become lottery regulator

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GEOGRAPHY, HISTORIC relations and the reality of American power – military and economic – and old-fashioned good sense require that Jamaica pays attention to the geopolitic­al concerns of the United States. It doesn’t mean, though, that we should cede our sovereignt­y to Washington.

That is why this newspaper again urges the Holness administra­tion, with the decorum required of diplomacy, to remind Donald Tapia, America’s legate in Kingston, of the line between pursuing his country’s legitimate interests and interferin­g in Jamaica’s domestic affairs. Mr Tapia is in the habit of losing his balance towards the latter. We fear it may be happening again with his interventi­on into the regulatory functions of the Betting, Gaming and Lotteries Commission (BGLC) as it relates to who that agency should authorise to operate in Jamaica’s lottery market.

Essentiall­y, the United States is seeking to open, in Jamaica, another front in its battle for the technologi­cal containmen­t of China. The ostensible premise of America’s action, however, is the protection of national security, including Jamaica’s.

The facts, as they are broadly known, are that the BGLC, over the objection of existing licensees, granted a licence to a new company, of which some of the island’s leading business people are principals, to run lotteries in Jamaica. These persons, including P.B. Scott of the Musson Group and Michelle Myers Mayne of Restaurant­s of Jamaica, would have met the BGLC’s fit-and-proper test. Further, their company would have demonstrat­ed the financial wherewitha­l to sustain the venture. And the Mahoe Gaming principals could hardly be deemed subversive­s, or modern-day versions of Kim Philby, Anthony Blunt or others of the Cambridge Five.

OPEN DOORS FOR SPYING

Mahoe intends to use operating systems manufactur­ed by the Chinese firm Genlot Game Technology, a major provider of such services to China and a few other markets. “We sought a worldrated provider of lottery technology to allow us to maximise enjoyment and improve the experience of the Jamaican consumer,” Ms Myers Mayne said in a statement.

However, Mr Tapia has argued that the use of Genlot will open the doors to Chinese spying in Jamaica, supposedly because Genlot has worked closely with the telephone/communicat­ions technology provider Huawei, which Donald Trump has been aggressive­ly attempting to dislodge from Western telecoms markets. Washington was successful, two years ago, in having Australia ban Huawei from its market for fifth-generation (5G) phone technology, while Britain recently did an about-face of its decision to allow UK firms to have the Chinese company supply up to 30 per cent of their 5G systems.

America’s argument is that Huawei could become a Chinese Trojan horse to compromise the West’s communicat­ions infrastruc­ture, using their access to databases to spy on people, including stealing business informatio­n. “I am concerned, and Jamaicans should be concerned, that you are opening your doors to Chinese intelligen­ce services to access specific personal data on both Jamaican and American citizens,” Mr Tapia told Nationwide News Network.

Perhaps it is true that the United States is concerned about Chinese intelligen­ce gathering secrets, or that they may pinch the proprietar­y informatio­n of Western firms. But many global analysts see these accusation­s in the context of the emerging Sino-American power dynamic, exacerbate­d in the age of Trump.

REMAIN SOLE SUPERPOWER

Over the last four decades China, now the world’s second-largest economy, has emerged as a challenger to America’s economic and technologi­cal dominance, helped, Washington says, by those alleged thefts. Others perceive in the American trope, Washington’s wish to remain the sole superpower and an intent, therefore, to slow China’s advance.

This, therefore, is to be considered in any analysis of the move against Huawei and Mr Trump’s insistence that the social media platform, TikTok, whose database of its American users is in the United States, must sell its US operation to an American firm. And now Genlot is added to the list of Chinese technology companies in Washington’s firing line.

This attempt to again make Jamaica part of the battlegrou­nd of Sino-American competitio­n has placed Kingston in a delicate situation, given our historic close relations with the United States. However, China has been a principled and supportive diplomatic partner of Jamaica for nearly a halfcentur­y, particular­ly over the past decade with its investment in, and loans to the island to enhance the crumbling infrastruc­ture.

We have been offered no supporting evidence of Beijing’s malintent towards Jamaica and the Caribbean, or that China should be contained beyond what is provided for by that system of multilater­alism that polices global relations. We know, though, that Mr Trump’s policies would dismantle those arrangemen­ts which provide protection­s for small states – some of which Mr Trump referred to as “sh**hole countries” – like ours.

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