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The Business Times, 24 Jun 04

Harrah's to meet S'pore officials on casino

HARRAH'S Entertainment Inc, the No 2 US casino company, will hold talks with Singapore officials today to discuss setting up a casino in the city, senior vice-president Jan Jones said. Vienna-based Casinos Austria International is also interested in a venture with the government, chief executive Frank McFadden said. Mr McFadden and Mr Jones were speaking on the sidelines of a gaming conference in Singapore.

Singapore has said it may include a casino in a resort and residential development being planned for one of its offshore islands, to lure more tourists and business travellers. Harrah's, Las Vegas Sands Inc, and Macanese tycoon Stanley Ho's Sociedade de Jogos de Macau are among foreign companies that have expressed interest in the project.

'Singapore has a huge market area, not only with the population base, but with additional millions of customers within very close proximity,' Mr Jones said. Over 2.5 billion people live within seven hours flying time from Singapore, which currently only allows lotteries and betting on horse-racing, and which may restrict some of its four million people from visiting any casino in the city.

The government is considering allowing a casino to woo more tourists, as manufacturing and other jobs are lured to lower-wage countries such as China. Some 651,860 people visited the city in April, more than triple the number in the year-earlier period.

'The potential is in Singapore,' Mr McFadden said. 'Its infrastructure can support the casino by extending quality tourism, while the air links, hotels and other entertainment facilities are already here.'

Rising wealth in Asia is attracting gaming companies, especially as China doesn't permit casinos except in Macau. Las Vegas Sands Inc last month opened a new casino in Macau, and Sands president William Weidner said the company would hold talks with Singapore. 'The whole objective here is to attract Chinese tourists who are a lot more keen in gaming,' said Nizam Idris, deputy head of research at IDEAglobal in Singapore. 'Right now, there's not a lot of choice for Chinese tourists, who can only visit Macau or Genting.'

The casino operators called for the Singapore government to establish clear policies to regulate the gambling industry. - Bloomberg

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