Antigua battle with the United States over Internet gambling

Antigua and Barbuda’s prime minister said he was hopeful that weekend meetings with members of the U.S. Congress would help resolve an ongoing trade battle with the United States over online gambling. Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer discussed the dispute with New York Democrat Rep. Charles Rangel, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, and three other members of the Congressional Black Caucus on the sidelines of a regional business conference. Antigua accuses the U.S. of crippling its gaming industry by effectively banning Americans from placing online bets with gambling operators in the Caribbean nation. “We’re hoping that coming out of this dialogue here, Charlie Rangel would have a better and greater appreciation of Antigua and Barbuda’s position,” Spencer said. The U.S. Congress last year barred American banks and credit card companies from processing payments made to online and offshore gambling operators, denying the international gaming industry access to a lucrative U.S. market. Antigua, which has promoted online gambling to ease its dependency on tourism, filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization and is seeking to impose US$3.4 billion (€2.3 billion) in trade sanctions against the U.S. The WTO last December upheld Washington’s right to prevent offshore gambling, but said the U.S. could not target offshore and online casinos without applying the same rules to American operators of off-track horse and dog race betting. After that ruling, Washington vowed to remove and exempt Internet gambling from its WTO treaty obligations. Australia, Canada, Costa Rica, India, Japan, Macau and the 27-nation European Union have joined Antigua in filing compensation claims as a result.

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