Three hotel projects including that of Packer approved; no casino facilities
December 17, 2013 10:39 pm
Sri
Lanka has approved Australian Crown Resorts Ltd’s $400 million complex along
with two similar projects, but without any explicit permission to operate
casinos at them.
However,
Crown’s chief, gambling tycoon James Packer, would still be able to operate a
casino in his mixed-development project through his local partner, Faizer
Mustapha told Reuters.
The
government’s decision to alter the deal’s terms came after opposition politicians
said Packer was getting concessions not given to local entrepreneurs and
Buddhist leaders said the casino could be detrimental to Sri Lanka’s culture.
Faizer
Mustapha, the deputy investment promotion minister said a new gazette
notification has been issued for Packer’s joint venture and two similar
requests by Sri Lanka’s top conglomerate John Keells Holdings and a leading
local businessman Dhammika Perera respectively.
A
gazette notification is issued after an approval by the cabinet of ministers
before being presented to the parliament.
“The
applications are for mixed development projects, which include convention
centre, shopping malls, and five-star hotels,” Mustapha told Reuters.
“This
gazette notification has no mention about a casino anywhere. So it doesn’t deal
with running a casino, operating a casino, or approving a casino.”
However,
he said there was a separate mechanism for operating a casino in Sri Lanka and
government policy was not to issue any new casino licences, but to allow
existing approvals to operate under regulations passed in 2010.
GAMING
PARADISE?
Packer
said in a speech at a Commonwealth forum last month said he believed the Indian
Ocean island nation could be turned into a leading tourist hotspot for the
rising middle classes of India, China and the rest of Asia.
Government
officials have told Reuters that two Sri Lankan entrepreneurs have five casino
approvals among them. Packer’s Sri Lankan partner Ravi Wijeratne owns two and
Dhammika Perera owns three, they have said.
The
Crown resort-casino complex is planned for a two-acre plot in the heart of the
Colombo commercial hub. It has already been delayed once after the government
asked Lake Leisure Holdings, the joint venture between Crown Ltd and its local
partner, Rank Entertainment Holdings Pvt Ltd, to change its construction plans.
Local
media have reported that Perera, who has been running casinos on a small scale
would use one of his approvals for Queensbury, a $350 million resort near
Packer’s planned complex, and has committed another to Keell’s $850 million
Water Front mixed-development project.
He
has also planned to lure one more U.S. or Asian gaming brand for a third casino
approval to build 500-700 room complex also near Packer’s resort.
Sri
Lanka’s Buddhist leaders have repeatedly urged President Mahinda Rajapaksa not
to allow casinos, saying they are detrimental to the culture of a country that
is a predominantly Buddhist and where gambling is not approved of morally,
despite the intermittent presence of casinos since 1990s.
Crown
has confirmed it was in detailed discussions with the Sri Lankan government and
potential joint venture partners regarding the development of a 5-star
integrated resort.
Packer,
one of Australia’s richest men, has been in talks since February with the
government about the integrated resort and investment options as he expands his
global gambling business that includes casinos in Australia, Macau, Britain and
the United States, Reuters reports.
