Thais swarm Poipet casinos
AFP / Bangkok Post | 22 June 2014
A Cambodian man rides past a gate of the Golden Crown Casino in the Thai-Cambodian border city of Poipet, June 19, 2014
Desperate for a flutter during the junta
crackdown on gambling at home, Thais are making a beeline for casinos in
a seedy Cambodian border town - which has already been deluged by
Cambodian migrants fleeing the kingdom.
A Cambodian man rides past a gate of the Golden Crown Casino in the Thai-Cambodian border city of Poipet, June 19, 2014
For more than a decade Poipet, a scruffy, vice-ridden frontier town
studded with casinos and online gambling booths, has lured customers
from neighbouring Thailand, where betting is all but banned.
Casino staff in Poipet told AFP the chips have been changing hands at
an unusually fast rate since the Thai army seized power across the
border on May 22.
A junta blitz on organised crime has seen raids on underground
casinos, dozens of arrests and access to a number of online gambling
sites blocked.
In its get-tough message to illegal gamblers - and any local
officials caught in cahoots with casino operators - the army rulers
cited the need "to safeguard the public and uphold social order".
The warning brought a boon to Poipet's card tables, slot machines and
24-hour online gaming booths - key for live betting on World Cup
football matches being played in Brazil.
"We cannot play these games in Thailand now," 32-year-old Nan told
AFP as she laid a 100 Thai baht ($3) stake at a baccarat table at the
Crown Resort Casino.
"Police will arrest us... the military has shut down illegal gambling," she added, refusing to give her real name.
Thais can only gamble on their state lottery or at a handful of horse
racing meetings, prompting punters to splurge millions of dollars each
year overseas.
Much of it funnels into Poipet, a four-hour drive from Bangkok, and the fastest-growing of Cambodia's casino towns.
There are few available figures on the sums spent by Thais in Poipet
in an opaque industry clouded further by the restrictions on both Thais
and Cambodians gambling on home soil.
But Cambodian government figures from 2011 showed gambling brought an
annual tax bonanza of $20 million to the impoverished nation -- as well
as thousands of spin-off jobs and strong profits for casino owners.
- Full House -
Cambodian croupier, Bopha -- also not her real name -- said the
latest Thai influx came in parallel with a sudden deluge of more than
220,000 Cambodian migrant workers into the town.
They began to flee Thailand through Poipet around 10 days ago amid
rumours of a violent crackdown on illegal workers, which the army
strongly denies.
"Last week when a lot of Cambodians returned so many Thai people came
to gamble too... it is because they cannot gamble now in Thailand," she
added.
In a nation dependent on cheap foreign labour, the migrant exodus has
sheared many factories and construction sites of their workforce.
It has raised fresh economic worries in Thailand, which has limped
towards recession after months of debilitating political protests which
presaged the army coup.
But the sight of trucks crammed with weary Cambodian migrants has failed to deter Thai gamblers.
"They are flocking to Poipet," according to Sungsidh Piriyarangsan, an expert on gambling at Thailand's Rangsit University.
"There are nine casinos in Poipet and gamblers like to try their luck
at different ones... It's hard to stop them from crossing the border
although (Thai) authorities know why they go there."
While there are no recent studies of what remains a controversial
topic in the kingdom, Sungsidh estimates Thailand's illegal gambling
sector to be worth anywhere between $9-12 billion annually.
The money that flows into Cambodia and its casino operators is
dwarfed by revenue in Asia's gambling mecca Macau, which hit a record
$45 billion in 2013.
But Poipet is growing amid a wider gaming boom in Asia over the past decade.
Last year, US-listed Entertainment Gaming Asia opened the doors to a new $7.5 million slot machine hall in the border town.
And in a town already geared towards its Thai guests -- World Cup
odds are written in Thai and croupiers speak the language -- the casinos
are flinging their doors open to exiled gamblers from across the
border.
Keep up-to-date with the latest on coup d'etat with Bangkok Post SMS News.
Call *451391000 to subscribe – 39 baht/month (7 days free, available in Thailand only)
Bangkok Post SMS News: Deliver only trustworthy news on SMS
No comments:
Post a Comment