Tourism Minister the Hon. Obie Wilchcombe is pictured with talk show host, Lester R. Cox. The Minister was a guest on Connected with Lester R. Cox on Guardian Radio 96.9FM on Thursday, 4th September 2014. The show was co-hosted by Terry Bethel.
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“We are admired by our gaming” said Tourism Minister Obie
Wilchcombe as he discussed a wide range of policy issues and in particular the
newly tabled Gaming Bill. He was a guest on Connected with Lester R. Cox on
Guardian Radio 96.9 FM on Thursday.
Commenting on the history and evolution of local gaming,
the Minister pointed out that “we’ve been in gaming 100 years, people don’t
realize that…..the first casinos were in Bimini” and gambling “was always an
amenity” on hotel properties as the government looked for ways to secure hard
foreign direct currency to fund government operations and develop the economy.
He also pointed out that the ban on Bahamians in land
based casinos decades ago was a compromise by the government of the day but it
made sense under those circumstances and that structure worked for the
development of the local tourism industry and economy with many Bahamians
employed in high end jobs in casinos.
The illegal participation of Bahamians in gaming or the “numbers”
industry started some sixty years ago, but all gaming in a number of countries
began as an illegal enterprise said the Minister. “All gaming started - the
root was of course illegal, all gaming” and that today “it has gone to the
point where you now have technology – technology has changed the game.” He went
on to say that the previous administration granted a number of web shop licenses
and that opened the gate which brings the country to the next step, which is
regulation. “It got to the point where in the last administration licenses were
given for business shops. Once that was done, you opened the door - you opened
the door for the next step which had to be regularizing what exist today. So
that’s what we have done.”
Addressing the issue of discrimination against Bahamians
as regards land based casinos the Minister said that the new Gaming Bill “allows
for the Minister upon moving for regulations to allow Bahamians to go to the casinos
and play…the bill now allows for Bahamians to go into casinos after regulations
are passed. The Minister now has that authority when he didn’t have the
authority before.”
The Minister was referring to section 69 of the Gaming
Bill 2014 titled “Prohibition in respect of gaming” starting at number 6.