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Putin To Russians: Stop Drinking And Gambling

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  • Putin To Russians: Stop Drinking And Gambling

    PUTIN TO RUSSIANS: STOP DRINKING AND GAMBLING

    MINA
    Wednesday, 01 July 2009

    At the Metelitsa casino, the oldest private gambling house in Moscow,
    which opened in 1993 after the fall of the Soviet Union, they are
    packing up the card shoes and folding the gaming tables away.

    Across Russia thousands of others are doing the same as a gambling
    ban comes into force today. Gambling is now illegal outside special
    zones in four remote regions under laws ordered by Vladimir Putin,
    the Prime Minister, which have cost up to half a million jobs and
    $1 billion in tax revenues. The ban spells the end of an era which
    witnessed an eruption of gambling fuelled by a lawless business
    culture in which fortunes were made and lost with dizzying speed.

    "We can't really believe it's happening. We have had to make 1,000
    people redundant," says Ian Livingstone, the Metelitsa's British
    general manager. "We were hoping with the current financial crisis
    that there would be some leniency for two or three years, but they
    didn't do it. It's hard to understand why this decision was made
    in the first place." As a result of the new legislation, the neon
    casino frontages that illuminated central Moscow's prestigious Novy
    Arbat street are dark after the Metelitsa and several of more than
    500 gambling venues in the capital chose to close a day early, on
    Monday night, to avoid possible police raids.

    As the deadline to shut up shop approached, waitresses marked the
    Metelitsa's demise by handing out glasses of champagne to customers
    who eagerly placed bets at blackjack tables and on roulette, some
    spraying $500 chips across the baize. Through the cigar smoke one told
    The Times: "I changed $2,000 into chips and I'm just enjoying myself
    because there'll be no more chances after today. It's a stupid law."

    Mr Putin insists that the measure will tackle a growing problem of
    gambling addiction among Russians and control an industry notorious
    for links with criminal gangs and moneylaundering. Critics argue
    that it will do the reverse, and simply drive gambling underground
    and into criminal control. Relentless police pressure had already
    forced hundreds of gambling establishments to close and Moscow city
    council insisted that the last 524 would shut by today. The city's
    coffers stand to lose almost $200 million in annual tax revenues as
    a result. Many casino operators plan to leave Russia, arguing that
    Government gambling zones - in the Baltic exclave of Kaliningrad, the
    Altai region of Siberia, the Far East area of Primoriye and around the
    Sea of Azov in southern Krasnodar region - will need $40 billion in
    investment to turn them into the Russian equivalents of Las Vegas,
    Atlantic City or Monte Carlo. Mr Livingstone said that Metelitsa
    would examine opportunities in Kazakhstan, while others are looking
    to Armenia and Georgia.
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