The Borneo Post (Sabah)

All bets are off inside Laos’ jungle sin city

- By Marion Thibaut

TON PHEUNG, Laos: It’s nine in the morning and the gaming tables are still going strong. As croupiers take bets from the overnight die-hards, several exhausted gamblers sleep nearby, one still clutching a wad of betting slips.

Welcome to the Kings Romans, a sprawling casino complex topped by a giant golden crown that bursts into view from a sleepy river bank on the Laos’ side of the Mekong River.

The Chinese-owned casino in Ton Pheung district, Bokeo, is the centrepiec­e of a 10,000square metre “Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone” set up by communist-ruled Laos with investment from its giant neighbour.

The other Golden Triangle nations, Thailand and Myanmar sit just across river, an intersecti­on that has long hosted illicit activities — from drugs and human traffickin­g to weapons smuggling and the sale of rare species.

The casino is an attempt by the Laos government to cash in on an activity that is banned in China yet loved by its people: gambling.

And the good times are rolling as a Chinese crackdown on gambling and other vices pushes pleasure-seekers to more permissive nations nearby.

The two-storey Kings Romans casino is dwarfed by its rivals in the regional gambling hub of Macau and even in Southeast Asian neighbours Cambodia and Vietnam.

But — open seven days a week, 24 hours a day — Kings Romans receives a steady stream of Chinese gamblers who have made their way south with pockets and briefcases filled with cash.

“Chinese players really are among the greatest gamblers in the world,” a hostess responsibl­e for welcoming customers enthused to AFP during a recent visit.

“They can stay one or two days at the same gaming table nonstop, it’s incredible,” she added, unwilling to give her name in a zone dominated by murky interests and where discretion is the watchword.

Venturing inside the SEZ feels like stepping into mainland China. The clocks are all set to Beijing time, Mandarin and other Chinese dialects are commonplac­e and the main currency is the yuan.

Few of the employees are Laotian. Most are Chinese or from Myanmar.

For impoverish­ed, landlocked and isolated Laos, the zone is a much needed source of income.

Chinese money runs throughout the Laos economy. It is the nation’s biggest investor with rail, roads and hydropower among China’s main interests.

But observers say the inflow of cash has come at a cost — including serious environmen­tal damage and the displaceme­nt of landless poor to make way for mega-projects.

Observers say the SEZ has now become a place to wash dirty money from China as well as local criminal networks, with fears the 99-year lease will only cement that status.

The Golden Triangle has long been known for its drug production. In previous decades it produced some of the world’s most sought after heroin.

In more recent years many of the drug syndicates have switched to lab-produced crystal meth and other synthetic highs, according to a recent United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report.

“Cash-based commercial activities such as casinos, currency exchange shops or even just restaurant­s offer better opportunit­ies to introduce in the legitimate economy money obtained through illegal activities,” warns Giovanni Brossard, from the UNODC.

Laos has moved to crack down on money laundering, Brossard notes, with laws against the crime and by setting up a financial intelligen­ce unit within the country’s state bank.

“Yet so far no single money laundering case has made it to court,” he says.

Alongside gambling a whole host of other bacchanali­an industries have sprung up to cater to punters looking to play away from prying eyes in their homelands.

Sex workers openly ply their trade on the sidewalks or at the myriad massage parlours.

“People love to come here with friends and book private rooms,” explains a Chinese member of staff at a disco near the casino.

“Most are men and they bring in girls.”

Conservati­onists say the SEZ also caters to those with illegal culinary tastes.

A recent probe by campaign group the Environmen­tal Investigat­ion Agency (EIA) found visitors could openly buy products from endangered species including tigers, leopards, elephants, rhinos and bears.

Restaurant­s offered sauteed tiger meat, bear paws and live pangolins on their menus.

“One business kept alive python and a bear cub in cages, both of which were available to eat on request,” the NGO’s investigat­ors found.

During AFP’s visit in early April, the businesses allegedly unmasked by the EIA investigat­ion were no longer open. As a signatory to the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), Laos is supposedly committed to stopping illegal wildlife traffickin­g and clamping down on the illegal ivory trade.

But the convention is widely flouted. — AFP

Animal rights workers say both Laos and China have a responsibi­lity to ensure the special economic zone does not become a haven for the illicit wildlife trade.

“The Chinese businesses and consumers are exploiting weak enforcemen­t in Laos, but the Laos government can’t pretend they are ignorant of what is going on,” says Debbie Banks, from EIA. — AFP

Chinese players really are among the greatest gamblers in the world. They can stay one or two days at the same gaming table non-stop, it’s incredible. – Casino hostess

 ??  ?? (Clockwise from top left) Myanmar migrants playing pool at a covered market in Ton Pheung. • On board a Kings Romans casino shuttle boat crossing the Mekong river from Thailand to Ton Pheung. • Getting a hair cut at a salon in the Chinatown quarter in...
(Clockwise from top left) Myanmar migrants playing pool at a covered market in Ton Pheung. • On board a Kings Romans casino shuttle boat crossing the Mekong river from Thailand to Ton Pheung. • Getting a hair cut at a salon in the Chinatown quarter in...
 ??  ?? Chinese employees of a hotel tending to customers in Ton Pheung, a special economic zone set in northweste­rn Laos along the Mekong river, at the border with Thailand and Myanmar. Chinese money runs throughout the Laos economy.
Chinese employees of a hotel tending to customers in Ton Pheung, a special economic zone set in northweste­rn Laos along the Mekong river, at the border with Thailand and Myanmar. Chinese money runs throughout the Laos economy.
 ??  ?? (L) Myanmar migrants riding bicycles past a building with signs written in Chinese characters in Ton Pheung. • (R) Myanmar migrants sitting on scooters in the Chinatown quarter in Ton Pheung.
(L) Myanmar migrants riding bicycles past a building with signs written in Chinese characters in Ton Pheung. • (R) Myanmar migrants sitting on scooters in the Chinatown quarter in Ton Pheung.
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