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March 15, 2013

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Philippines bets on new casino-hotel

THE Philippines will become one of the biggest gambling centers in the world, vying with Macau, Singapore and Las Vegas for Asia's high rollers, officials of a US$1 billion casino resort opening in Manila this weekend said yesterday.

Studies project that the country's gambling revenue of US$1.9 billion will rise to US$6 billion, which is currently what Singapore's two casinos generate, in about five years, said Michael French, chief operating officer of the Solaire Resort and Casino.

Solaire will open tomorrow as one of the country's biggest hotel-casino complexes in ceremonies to be attended by President Benigno Aquino III, who is targeting 10 million tourists by 2016.

It has 500 hotel rooms, 1,200 slot machines and 295 gaming tables, including those in private rooms with a view of Manila Bay for high rollers. It has eight restaurants, a spa, a night club, and will have a 1,800-seat Broadway-type theater, French said.

It is the first of four such developments in the US$4 billion Entertainment City being built on a 100-hectare property reclaimed from Manila Bay. The flagship of Bloomberry Resorts Corp is majority owned by one of the Philippines' wealthiest men, container ports operator Enrique Razon.

The Entertainment City development is potential employment and economic bonanza for the Philippines. Its reputation as a tourist spot has been tarnished by reports of crime, including kidnapping, alongside insurgent violence and the operation of a notorious militant Islamic group in the country's south.

The country has not yet recovered from the drop in the number of visitors from Hong Kong following the killing of eight tourists from there by a dismissed police officer in Manila in August 2010, just two months after Aquino took office.

The hotel-casino has 4,500 employees and will hire about 500 more, French said. About half of the staff work for the casino, including 400 senior officers who have worked in casinos in Macau, Singapore and in cruise liners.

French said the hotel-casino will offer an "East meets West" venue, combining "the glitz and grandeur and the sparkle of Las Vegas" and the "Macau experience" of VIP gambling.




 

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