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The Business Times, 15 Jul 04

Churches council speaks out against casino idea
By M. Nirmala

THE National Council of Churches of Singapore (NCCS) has come out strongly against the idea of having a casino here.

The council, representing the Anglicans, Methodists and Presbyterians, among others, had this message in its four-page statement to its member churches yesterday: 'We speak against the building of a casino in Singapore.' Advertisement Casinos, it said, undermine moral values and virtues. And the move will, in the long run, go against the Government's aim of having a family-friendly society.

The statement came on the same day Dr Vivian Balakrishnan, Minister of State (Trade and Industry and National Development) reiterated, at an international meeting of amusement park companies, that the Government was deciding whether to build the planned casino within an integrated entertainment centre.

The Government will decide by January after extensive consultations and a careful study of its social and economic implications. The proposed casino on Sentosa has been criticised despite government assurances that measures will be taken to control the negative effects of gambling.

Last month, Pergas, the Singapore Islamic Scholars and Religious Teachers Association, opposed it, saying it will bring more harm than benefit to the country.

The letter, a copy of which was obtained by The Straits Times, said Singapore should hold fast to the values and virtues taught by various bodies, like religious organisations, clan associations and educational institutions. 'These hard-earned values and virtues like thrift, industry, generosity and fairness, should not be unravelled by projects or policies which could subvert them and thus impoverish our society instead of enhancing it,' it said.

Among the council's many worries is that a gambling culture will signal that time-tested virtues 'shared by people of different faiths', such as honesty, compassion and trustworthiness, are no longer of primary concern to Singaporeans.

It said the main beneficiaries of the high-yielding casino business will be the operators, their shareholders and the Government. But the tax collected will be outweighed by the economic and social dangers.

The council argued that Singapore is not so poor and desperate that it has to depend on revenues from casinos and gambling to increase the gross domestic product and finance social projects. 'Even if we are poor, we should be a people of dignity and moral courage,' it said.

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