Singapore opens first casino resort
Bangkok Post: 14 Feb 2010 Singapore rolls dice on first casino
source: AFP
Singapore's first casino opened for business Sunday as the first punter was allowed into the gaming section of Resorts World Sentosa complex.
Visitors flock inside Singapore's first casino at the Resorts World Sentosa complex in Singapore. Singapore's first casino opened for business Sunday as the first punter was allowed into the gaming section of Resorts World Sentosa complex.
The opening -- to be followed within months by a second casino resort -- is part of a multi-billion-dollar effort to transform Singapore's tourism industry.
The doors to the cavernous and carpeted casino were thrown open to the public at 12:18 pm on the first day of the Year of the Tiger in the Chinese lunar calendar.
When pronounced in the Cantonese dialect, 12:18 sounds like "prosperity". A middle-aged Singaporean woman was the first gambler allowed in, followed by an initial crowd of about 200.
The 4.4 billion US dollar resort features Southeast Asia's first Universal Studios movie theme park, which also opened for a week of sneak previews from Sunday.
"We have waited a long time for this. Today's opening of the casino is a milestone for Resorts World Sentosa, for Genting Group and for Singapore," said Genting Group chairman Lim Kok Thay in a ceremony before the doors opened.
"We couldn't have asked for a better time to open," he said, referring to Asia leading the world in recovering from the worst global recession since the 1930s.
Singapore's second casino complex, Marina Bay Sands, is being completed by US-based Las Vegas Sands and is expected to open in April.
Officials hope the casinos will help Singapore achieve its target of 17 million visitors a year generating more than 21 billion US dollars by 2015, boosting the services sector and reducing the role of manufacturing in the economy.
A lion dance and firecrackers preceded the opening of the casino.
Resorts World Sentosa last month opened four premium hotels and is testing the rides at the Universal Studios theme park before it is fully opened to the public.
Singapore in 2005 agreed to go ahead with two casino resorts after a rare public debate.
Opponents feared gambling would threaten Singapore's "family values" reputation and put it at risk of becoming a centre for money-laundering.
As a "social safeguard", Singaporeans will have to pay 100 dollars a day (70 US) to enter the casinos.
Singapore opens first casino resort
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