The 'maharaja' Of Casinos Opens In Goa Next Month!

Tuesday 04th of March 2008
An offshore casino with 'no-limits' tables, touted as the biggest in
South Asia, will open in Goa next month.

Aboard a specially commissioned 70-metre long Panamanian vessel,
costing $25 million, it will be operated by Creative Gaming Solution,
a subsidiary of Mumbai-based Pan India Network Infravest Pvt Ltd
(Pinipl), the promoter of the Playwin lottery.

'It will be the biggest offshore casino and will be an added appeal
for tourists to visit Goa,' Pinipl managing director Amar Sinha told
IANS.

The ship, appropriately named 'Maharajah Casino', will offer a regal
ambience to professional and amateur gamblers out to try their luck at
the jackpot. It will initially conduct operations from 6 p.m. to 6
a.m. and within a month offer round-the-clock services.

It will be anchored around 20 metres off the Mandvi river in Goa's
capital Panaji. Two boats will ferry the patrons to the offshore
casino.

'It will house 35 tables in an area of 22,000 square feet spread over
four decks. All the internationally popular casino games like American
Roulette, Black Jack, and variants of Poker will be available for the
patrons,' Sinha said.

Each table will have a 'no-limits' betting system and at any given
time the ship will have a cash chest of $1 million on board.

The luxury ship, built with imported fire-retardant interiors, will
also house a lavish restaurant offering international multi-cultural
cuisine, a bar, a live barbecue area on the topmost deck, a sundeck
and a variety of entertainment programmes to cater to its clientele.

Pinipl has already completed the relevant formalities for launching
the offshore gambling den. It includes paying a one-time deposit of
Rs.1 million for five years for the 'Maharajah Casino.'

The entrance charges for the patrons shall be decided keeping in view
the seasonal tourism fluctuations in Goa and other factors, according
to Sinha.

He added that the offshore casino would help attract a different
element of people who never come down to Goa, which in turn will boost
the tourism industry in the state and fill up the state's coffers.

Besides attracting foreigners, Sinha is hoping that some of the
domestic crowds from the India-Kathmandu sector shall be diverted to
Goa.

'Many Indians who regularly frequented Kathmandu casinos have been
hunting for alternatives in and around India owing to the recent bouts
of unrest in the Himalayan kingdom,' he explained.

Sinha claims that as per initial projections, the company would earn a
revenue of around Rs.1 billion in the very first year of its
operation. 'Thereafter, the sky is the limit,' he smiled.

Maharajah Casino is undergoing finishing touches to its refurbishment
at the Victoria Docks in Mumbai. After it secures the necessary
approvals from the director-general of shipping, it will sail to its
permanent home by March-end.

Goa already boasts of India's first offshore, moving casino, the
215-foot-long 'The Caravela' which can accommodate 300 patrons at a
time.

In addition, several land-based deluxe hotels offer varying degrees of
casino facilities all around the state, proving a major revenue earner
for the state south of Maharashtra.

(Abhijit Deb can be contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED])

http://newspostindia.com/report-40654

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