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Armenia Tightens Gambling Industry With FATF Principles

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  • Armenia Tightens Gambling Industry With FATF Principles

    ARMENIA TIGHTENS GAMBLING INDUSTRY WITH FATF PRINCIPLES

    HULIQ
    April 6 2010
    SC

    The gambling industry of Armenia is about to experience a major
    overhaul using concepts developed from the Paris-based Financial
    Action Task Force (FATF) to guide the industry. The idea behind the
    reform is to prevent money laundering, terrorist financing and other
    illegal activities from taking place.

    Armenia's Deputy Finance Minister, Vardan Aramyan, made the
    announcement Tuesday in keeping with recent actions taken to move
    Armenia's casinos away from all cities such as the capital Yerevan.

    The country's three largest resort towns, Jermuk, Tsaghkadzor and
    Sevan would instead play host to the country's gambling halls.

    The pullback of Armenian casinos takes its lead from FATF principles.

    The policies issued by the FATF include the Forty Recommendations on
    money laundering as well as the 9 Special Recommendations on Terrorists
    Financing. These recommendations make it harder for money laundering
    to occur, while implementing policies that keep thorough records of
    customers and customer transactions.

    According to Aramyan, the new bill aids "Larger companies in
    this sector" which "are more disciplined and have control systems,
    separate subdivisions to fight against money laundering and financing
    of terrorism. Smaller companies are less disciplined, more negligent,
    and that is conditioned by their abilities."

    Currently, Armenia is home to 11 casinos and 103 gambling halls. The
    passage of the 'RA Concept on Regulation and Control of the Gambling
    Business Sector' on April 1 ensures more state control over the halls
    including regular visitor quantity counts and higher annual fees.

    The gambling sector in Armenia is an important part of the country's
    economy. It provides much needed revenue that pays for infrastructure
    and other improvements. Being a small country with a tiny population
    and having neighbors like Iran and Turkey (each has 72 million
    population) Armenia's gambling industry is poised to benefit from
    those markets. Only recently during the Iranian Novruz celebration
    more than 15,000 tourists from Iran visited Armenia in one week.

    The new FATF- sanctioned laws will hopefully clean up the sector
    without hurting profits.

    Written by Lani Shadduck HULIQ.com
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