Antigua hits back at US in gambling row

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • bigboydan
    SBR Aristocracy
    • 08-10-05
    • 55420

    #1
    Antigua hits back at US in gambling row
    Antigua hits back at US in gambling row

    Antigua and Barbuda's finance minister has defended his nation's bid to impose $3.4 billion in trade sanctions against the United States, which it accuses of ignoring a World Trade Organization ruling against a U.S. online betting ban.

    dismissed criticism

    Finance Minister L. Errol Cort dismissed criticism of Antigua's plan to target U.S. trademarks with $3.4 billion in penalties every year, until the United States applies its online and offshore betting ban more uniformly or allows Americans to place bets with international gambling businesses.

    Antigua, a Caribbean nation of 70,000 inhabitants, was slammed by a series of hurricane in the late 1990s, has since promoted electronic commerce, including online gaming, in a bid to ease its dependency on tourism. The U.S. Congress last year barred American banks and credit card companies from processing online gambling payments, denying international gaming businesses access to the lucrative U.S. market — the largest in a $15.5 billion global online betting industry. The WTO last December upheld Washington's right to prevent offshore gambling, but said it was illegal for the United States to target offshore casinos and online gambling without applying the same rules to American operators of off-track horse and dog race betting.

    After that ruling, Washington declared its intention to explicitly remove 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 a separate compensation claim as a result.
SBR Contests
Collapse
Top-Rated US Sportsbooks
Collapse
Working...