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The Star, 28 Mar 04

At odds over casino plan
by Seah Chiang Nee

Insight: Down South

An online debate on the government’s proposal to build a casino has shown that behind a worldly-wise, progressive facade, a large portion of Singapore’s mindset remains unchanged. The outcome has dealt a blow to the perception that the New Singapore reflects the views of younger, better-educated citizens who are liberal, Westernised and always favouring deregulation.

The casino discussion has brought out a different under-current. There are Singaporeans wanting the ban to continue as there are people advocating that it be lifted.

This is what happened. In a major shift, the government said it was ready to allow a casino to be built as part of its 500-hectare resort and residential development on the island.

For a long time, the People’s Action Party (PAP) government had refused to follow Asia’s flourishing casino path. It had not relented even when thousands of its citizens began to flock overseas to gamble, losing substantial foreign exchange. Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew had fretted about the impact of gambling on families in Singapore. After all, the Chinese are known to be the world’s most avid gamblers.

That the government now allows a proposed casino on Sentosa Island is a psychological milestone in Singapore. Approval seems to rest on two conditions – one, it must be part of a bigger resort project and not by itself; and two, there must be measures to keep away the vulnerable, lower-income. The casino forms part of a large tourist and residential development on Sentosa, 3km from the city centre, and accessible by bridge, cable car and boat. It is modelled on Atlantis on Paradise Island in the Bahamas and will have a range of facilities, including beaches, hotels, high-class homes, marinas, health spas, sports complexes, convention centres, and retail and food outlets.

Only last November, Deputy Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong had turned it down. “We have to consider the social implications, and I would not support it,” he told Business Times. A final decision is awaited, but the position has moved from a “no” to a “maybe” and now “probably”. This added credence to Lee’s claim that he has an open mind and is prepared to accept a rational argument against his own.

Singaporeans were shocked when Minister for Trade and Industry George Yeo announced that the government was now ready to build one, under safeguards (to admit only upper middle-class citizens). However, businessmen and the liberal-minded welcomed it as another step to open up the economy, make society vibrant and offer more choices to citizens.

How could anyone oppose a move that will help Singapore seek new economic avenues and create more jobs, right? Wrong! The disagreements started coming in. Strong views were expressed in the media, radio forums and half a dozen Internet chat-sites that involve professionals, parents, students and businessmen. Part of it was at the invitation of the government consultation portal, seeking feedback that will go towards a decision.

The exercise reflects a society in transition. For one thing, it shows Singaporeans have become more divisive, less cohesive. The result was a split down the middle. Most supporters are liberal youths who advocate personal liberties and professionals and businessmen who believe that a casino has big potential to revive a stagnant economy. The most ardent are the unemployed or workers concerned about retrenchment. For them, it represents opportunity, something that is in short supply in recent years. A few say that flourishing Las Vegas, Monaco, Macau or Genting Highlands have significantly benefited their national economies without inflicting major harm on people.

On the other side are (at the risk of stereotyping) the older, conservative, and Christians and Muslims who fear the social consequences. George Yeo himself touched on their concerns about family break-ups and the possibility of organised crime.

If the green light is given, there will be measures to limit the access of Singaporeans. Unless they had the means, he said “Singaporeans should stay away from the casino and stick to 4D, horse-racing and Toto”. “If husbands go there after work, housewives go there and gamble with their family money, then there will be problems,” Yeo added. “We don’t want to be a Las Vegas, we don’t want to be a Macau. We don’t want to have the crime and the sleaze,” he said when defending the proposed entry restrictions on locals.

In a way, the debate is redundant. Thousands of Singaporeans are already gambling in Genting or on board cruise ships that offer cheap voyages. Wealthier gamblers go to Macau, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand or England. Japan and Thailand are likely to enter the market, too. Besides, today’s casinos are generally clean and well managed, unlike the crime-ridden institutions of 20 years ago. The major threat now comes from high-tech crooks using scanners and computers to cheat.

Conservative Singaporeans contend that gambling is immoral and unethical, luring the weak-minded into its trap and making bankrupts of them. The womenfolk are generally against it, saying there are other ways of earning tourist dollars. A strong criticism is levelled against the idea to exclude the lower-income from entry, which smacks of elitism and discrimination. Singapore is already a disturbingly class-divided society in which some of the better-off look down on lower-income earners, according to one line of thought.

Those who want change say the Internet and the global economy have brought so many changes that no country can protect citizens against their own action. Singaporeans have to learn to take responsibility for their own actions. “If people step into a casino or smoke or have unprotected sex or go into a risky investment, they can be hit because no government can help them,” read one comment.

On continuing with the ban, C.F. Lai wrote: “This shows that subconsciously, Singaporeans still want the nanny state to be around. “Come on! We are 38 years old. Surely, we are mature enough to cross the street without nanny holding our hand or mature enough not to be seduced by sirens of gambling.”

Seah Chiang Nee is a veteran journalist and editor of the information website littlespeck.com

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