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The Straits Times, Editorial, 15 Nov 04

What odds a 'safe' casino?
LETTERS we have received on the subject of a casino have mostly spoken of the social disruptions. Other media have been inundated with naysayers' visions of family ruin and child neglect. Organised crime is also cited - more vicious, more professional, very likely foreign-controlled to boot.

This negative strand runs against the prevailing view that Asians take to gambling naturally. This is said to be especially true of those of Chinese origin. Horse racing revenues and Singapore Pools' hefty volumes in numbers and football betting provide some proof. Underground betting here, by the way, is said to be a bottomless goldmine for international syndicates. Weekend golf, social mahjong and poker are almost never without bets thrown in.

It could be that those who take a benign view of a casino, or gambling in general, do not feel a need to make their views known. They suppose the Government will proceed with a casino, as occasional remarks made and the interest shown by global gaming companies strongly imply.

Now, we have the Tourism Board's international advisory panel giving its considered view that a casino resort would be a requisite addition to Singapore's touristic appeal. As panel members are picked for their expertise in the leisure industry, their opinions will carry weight when the Government makes a decision.

It will be no easy task deciding. The Government has to balance the deeply-felt concerns of a sector of its citizens, against the unabashedly business calculations of the Tourism Board's advisers, three-quarters of whom happen to be foreigners.

A limited sampling by our research arm showed a statistical split - 53 per cent for, 47 per cent against.

Should the state give more attention to its citizens or well-meaning professionals with no stake here? This is a matter of some sensitivity.

We have said before that if a casino has to be built because it no longer makes sense to keep one out, then have one. Our position takes no account of the morality of gambling. Such determinations are best left to one's good sense.

But the Government has to be absolutely clear about what workable safeguards it can come up with to minimise dislocations and criminal infiltration. This was its assurance given to the people when it floated the idea for feedback.

We trust the foreign advisers had also conveyed to the Tourism Board ideas on how to keep a casino experience wholesome - to the extent this is possible.

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