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3-year Pilot Project Will Let Vietnamese Gamble


FILE - Residents place money during an illegal game of chance at a village outside Hanoi, Feb. 12, 2014. Vietnamese are passionate gamblers, from clandestine card games to bets on European soccer with underground bookies.
FILE - Residents place money during an illegal game of chance at a village outside Hanoi, Feb. 12, 2014. Vietnamese are passionate gamblers, from clandestine card games to bets on European soccer with underground bookies.

Vietnamese will be allowed to gamble in approved casinos and under certain conditions, in a three-year pilot project the government announced Friday.

Effective March 15, people over 21 with a regular monthly income of at least 10 million dong ($443) will be allowed to use the casinos, the government said.

To receive government approval, the casinos must be part of an entertainment and hotel complex project with investment capital of at least $2 billion, half of which must have been disbursed, and comply with several other requirements, it said.

Vietnamese are passionate gamblers, from clandestine card games to bets on European soccer with underground bookies, but the handful of casinos operating in the country now are strictly for holders of foreign passports.

Three years after the first project opens to Vietnamese, the government will review the decree and decide whether to keep it.

A change in legislation could make Vietnam an attractive bet for big gaming companies such as Las Vegas Sands, Genting Bhd, Nagacorp and Penn National Gaming, which have expressed interest, should locals be allowed to take part.

The appeal has much to do with Vietnam's demographics and its location, just a few hours from many Asian capitals and within easy reach of wealthy Chinese, who provide the lion's share of gaming revenue.

There are now fewer than 10 casinos in operation in the country.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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