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Antigua-Barbuda claims $3.4b from US over gambling ban

Published on Thursday, June 21, 2007 Email To Friend    Print Version

By Warren Giles

LONDON, England (Bloomberg): Antigua and Barbuda said it's entitled to $3.44 billion in compensation from the US in a World Trade Organization dispute over an American ban on Internet gambling.

The compensation would be in the form of Antigua withdrawing intellectual property protection for US trademarks, patents and industrial designs, the government said in a statement.

"We feel we have no other choice in the matter, we have fought long and hard for fair access to the US market and have won at every stage of the WTO process," said Errol Cort, Antigua's finance minister in an e-mailed statement. "This industry has been and can be regulated," he said, adding that the dispute isn't a moral issue, as claimed by the US.

After losing an appeal against earlier WTO decisions which found the US ban illegal, the US moved May 4 to "clarify" its commitments to the Geneva-based trade arbiter, saying it "never intended" to open its market to offshore Internet gambling when it made pledges on joining the WTO in 1994.

The 27-nation European Union increased the stakes in the case on Tuesday, saying it will also seek US compensation for any changes in US commitments.

Any government that says its interests are harmed by a change to pledges opening borders at the WTO is entitled to request negotiations with the US.

Antigua and Barbuda, the smallest nation to ever take a case at the WTO, says it's entitled to compensation for its losses. The government estimates that Americans spend $10 billion a year in online bets.

The country with a population of 80,000 developed Internet gambling to boost a tourism-dependent economy after several hurricanes in the 1990s.

The US Congress, then controlled by Republicans, passed legislation last September that curbs financial payments from banks to offshore Internet casinos that are illegal under US law. The law was aimed at shutting down the payment system for Internet gambling and caused betting sites such as SportingBet Plc to cease US operations or sell them for nominal amounts.
 
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