UK Lotto operator challenges the Gambling Commission’s decision to award £6.4bn contract to its rival, Allwyn

More than £1bn for good causes could be lost over a legal action alleging the new licence to run the national lottery was awarded unlawfully, according to court filings seen by the Observer.

Camelot, which operated the national lottery for nearly three decades, is seeking to reverse the decision to hand the licence to its rival Allwyn. It will go to court later this month in an appeal to delay the handover of the £6.4bn contract. The case threatens to embroil the lottery in its biggest controversy since it was launched in 1994 – and there is even a risk the lottery will be suspended for the first time in its history.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

UK warned to prepare for risk of winter flooding

Environment Agency urges people in flood zones to plan ahead as Met…

‘You could fill a museum with it’: the $963m Roman Abramovich art collection revealed

Leak suggests the oil and gas tycoon and his ex-wife Dasha Zhukova…

Thomas Cook relaunches as online travel agent

Customers can now tailor their own holidays after parent company and Club…

Bard timing: Argentinian TV reports death of Shakespeare after Covid jab

Newsreader confuses Bill Shakespeare, 81, ‘the first man to get the coronavirus…