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STATEMENT
by
H.E. Dr. JOHN W. ASHE
Ambassador of Antigua and
Barbuda to the World Trade Organisation
Meeting of the Dispute
Resolution Body
17 March 2006
Mr Chairman,
WTO members
My delegation wishes to make a few
comments in connection with the statement by the honourable
representative from the United States regarding the status of his
country’s compliance with the recommendations and rulings of the
DSB in this matter.
As we had anticipated, the statement
provides little in the way of useful information to this body and to
our country as to when and how the United States will come into
compliance with the recommendations and rulings of the DSB. With an
implementation deadline approaching on 3 April 2006, less than three
weeks from now, we might be forgiven, Sir, for having some anxiety
at a complete lack of information from the United States on this
most important matter facing the small and delicate economy of
Antigua and Barbuda.
This is our first experience with
dispute resolution at the WTO, but we had perhaps naively expected
that the United States would wish to engage with our government on
devising an equitable solution to our dispute that would take into
account the benefits accorded Antigua under the recommendations and
rulings, but also reasonably and comprehensively address the
concerns raised by the United States during the course of the
dispute as its justification for prohibiting the provision of
services from Antigua to American consumers. To our great
disappointment, and in spite of our numerous attempts on our part,
the United States has shown absolutely no interest in engaging with
us in this regard.
Mr. Chairman,
The official silence from Washington
on this matter that is deeply troubling. What is equally troubling
is what has actually been happening in the United States since we
won our hard-fought and costly dispute. Legislation has indeed been
introduced in the United States Congress addressing the difficult
topic of remote and Internet gambling.1
In fact, two bills have been introduced separately in the Congress
which are substantively quite similar. This legislation, one bill
entitled the “Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2005”
and another entitled the “Internet Gambling Prohibition Act,” is
the only
legislation introduced into the Congress since the determination of
the “reasonable period of time” in our case. Unfortunately, each
proposal is about as directly contrary to the recommendations and
rulings of the DSB as could possibly be imagined. Not only do these
bills do nothing to provide Antiguan operators with any access
whatsoever to the vast American gambling market, but in fact each
would further entrench the anti-GATS nature of United States
gambling law by expressly exempting from its application domestic
Internet gambling on horse racing, Internet gambling conducted by
Native American tribes and, most significant of all, Internet
gambling that occurs entirely within the border of a particular
state. We have maintained all along that the American prohibition
was really based upon the
cross-border nature of the services rather than any true
“evils” associated with “remote” gambling–and this pending
legislation emphatically confirms we were correct.
In addition to this legislation, WTO
members should know that the ubiquitous American-based money
transfer service–Western Union–this January ceased providing money
transfer services to and from Antigua and Barbuda. Ironically then,
our country, with a strong, tightly regulated and overseen financial
services sector, an enviable record of mutual assistance in
cooperating with other countries around the globe to detect, deter
and prevent financial crimes–and the only country to confront the
United States over its anti-competitive gaming practices–is one of
the very, very few countries in the entire world to which you cannot
send or from which you cannot receive funds via Western Union.
And finally, we all know of the
difficult questions facing many countries–particularly developing
countries–when considering the costs and benefits of signing on to a
multi-national trade organisation such as the WTO. In Antigua, we
have voluntarily complied with the demands of trading partners,
including particularly the United States, based upon our commitments
to our trading partners under the various WTO trade agreements.
Some of these things have clearly had an adverse impact on our own
efforts to enrich and achieve some autonomy in our small economy.
But we have been encouraged by the dominant economies on this planet
that this multi-lateral set of agreements would accrue to the
benefit of all of us. That we could compete with larger economies
and, in the case of a dispute, achieve a fair and balanced hearing
which would provide us with a meaningful remedy despite our limited
global economic consequence.
Mr. Chairman,
It is with great concern that we
learn that the United States Trade Representative has used our
weakness as an express reason why gaming and other interests in the
United States should not be concerned about our victory at the WTO.
As reported on a website of an interest group in the United States,
the USTR assured the participants at a conference held late last
year that “as they see it, the most Antigua can do is to levy
tariffs on US imports equal to the ‘damage’ done by the US failure
to comply with the WTO ruling. Antigua is a tiny economy and imports
little from the US. Imposing additional duties would simply make
American goods more expensive there.”2
Further, at the same meeting, USTR representatives were quoted as
saying that “if the WTO does not agree [with American compliance
efforts], the issue will likely be litigated for at least another
year.”3
We believe that the time has come for the United States to
demonstrate whether it is willing to be a
responsible stakeholder
in the WTO–whether the WTO agreements are to work for all of
us, equally, or whether the WTO is indeed a “one-way street” for the
large economies to further enrich themselves at the expense of
lesser ones. It is one thing to play by the rules on a purely
literal basis, and quite another to play by the rules in order to
attain the objectives the rules were designed to achieve.
I thank you Mr. Chairman.
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