Bangkok Post

MP SAYS CASINOS ARE SAFE BET

THAI LOCAL POWER PARTY LEADER URGES LAW CHANGE TO HALT POST-COVID SLUMP

- AEKARACH SATTABURUT­H

>>Known to be one of the most vocal proponents of legalising casinos, Chutchawan Kongu-dom, leader of Thai Local Power Party, is not just pushing for the relaxation of longstandi­ng laws to get a casinoente­rtainment project off the ground. He is also setting his sights on online gambling and the duty-free business.

With the House voting in favour of setting up an extra or committee dinary to study the proposal, Mr Chutchawan has high hopes the longawaite­d change will soon materialis­e.

“I believe it will be accepted because we will have regulation­s in place to keep young people away. I want it to take shape in two years...with constructi­on work completed. If not, we should at least enact a law to legalise casino gamsaid. bling,” he

He said the public would support legal casinos and a draft law has been prepared to support the plan which integrates a casino venue into a entertainm­ent complex.

Mr Chutchawan also serves on the 60-member House committee studying the proposal, headed by Deputy Transport Minister Atirat Ratanasate.

The panel has appointed five subcommitt­ees to explore related areas including legal issues, investment structure and the format of the complex, as well as measures to prevent any negative impacts.

The MP said the panel has invited stakeholde­rs including local officials and police to give their views. Several wanted only to focus on “what gaming should be allowed and what shouldn’t”, which is not the point of the proposal, he said.

He said the idea of legalising casinos is to draw the money into the country and to make money from casino, the country will have to ensure that gambling services meet internatio­nal standards and are fair.

He said the committee’s report should be comprehens­ive enough to support a draft law with the government on board as the issue has been examined by lawmakers.

“I think the House committee is trying its best to collect input. Eventually a new law will have to be enacted to regulate casino operations and make it right,” he said.

Mr Chutchawan said the rationale behind legalising casinos is economic and the country has been missing out on related income for decades.

Recounting the days when he still gambled only reinforced estimates that Thailand was missing out on the 70-80 billion baht each year that punters likely spend in foreign casinos.

He said it made him question whether that revenue should be kept in the domestic economy along with all the accompanyi­ng employment opportunit­ies that go hand-in-hand with such an undertakin­g.

Mr Chutchawan, who once floated the idea of opening a casino in Thung Kula Ronghai in the lower part of the northeaste­rn region, said he hopes that in the renewed proposal there will be three to four venues scattered across tourist hubs.

“Multi-billion-baht casino projects would create jobs, income and drive growth,” he said, adding that many who leave to seek work in other parts of the world might reconsider if there were more employment opportunit­ies at home.

Mr Chutchawan has also set his sights on legalising online gambling which is expanding rapidly and proving difficult to regulate.

“Mobile phones give punters easy access to betting websites and the upshot is that money is flowing out [of the country],” he said.

“The principle is to stop such hefty sums leaving our domestic market, an amount that could be in the billions, or even trillions, of baht.

‘‘Soccer betting is huge, and that revenue could be spent on education or assisting struggling farmers,” he said.

He said it is also time to open up the duty-free industry if the casino proposal gets the green light, noting that tourism would also increase, and preparatio­ns should begin early.

As for the ethical concerns that have always been cited as a reason for Thailand’s ban on gambling, he said that battle had been fought and lost as betting remains endemic.

Rather than trying to stem an overwhelmi­ng tide with nothing but a cup, Mr Chutchawan said wants the nation to follow the example set by countries which have profitably embraced and regulated gambling.

“Soccer betting is huge, and that revenue could be spent on education or assisting struggling farmers.

LEADER OF THAI LOCAL POWER PARTY, CHUTCHAWAN KONG-U-DOM

 ?? ?? PHOTO:
VARUTH HIRUNYATHE­B
PHOTO: VARUTH HIRUNYATHE­B

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