Binyamin Netanyahu is said to have asked ministers to examine licensing hotels or building casino in Red Sea resort of Eliat
Israel’s prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, is said to have asked two senior ministers to examine the feasibility of opening the country’s first legal casino in the coastal city of Eilat in an attempt to transform the tourist resort into the Las Vegas of the Red Sea.
The proposal, reported on Israeli television, resurrects a long-mooted and controversial plan to legalise casino gambling, which has historically been resisted by the religious and security authorities.
In the 1990s, Netanyahu’s long-time backer Sheldon Adelson, a casino magnate, was blocked after expressing an interest in opening a casino in Israel.
Gambling in Israel has a complex status. Israelis can bet on certain activities but not others, with Eilat already home to gambling cruises that take punters into international waters.
Another alternative is to cross the border to visit casino hotels in Egypt’s Red Sea resorts, although that has become less popular as the Sinai peninsula has been destabilised by increasing violence.
Illicit gambling is also available inside Israel, with the most recent illegal casino being discovered this summer in a disused bomb shelter.
Yariv Levin, the tourism minister, appeared to confirm reports of the new proposal being pushed by Netanyahu – originally revealed by Israel’s Channel 10 – by saying that he fully supported the idea.
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http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/sep/25/israel-first-legal-casino-gambling-binyamin-netanyahu-eliat-reports