US Decries Antigua Plans for "Government-Authorized Piracy" in WTO Online Gambling Dispute US Decries Antigua Plans for "Government-Authorized Piracy" in WTO Online Gambling Dispute
Malene Thyssen, Attribution-Share Alike 2.5 Generic
Key Takeaways
  • At January meeting Antigua is expected to present a plan to collect $21m annually from US
  • Antigua’s plan is expected to include, “international rights to produce and sell US-copyrighted merchandise without having to reimburse US-based rights holders. “
  • From a statement by the US: “Antigua has no justification for taking any retaliatory actions against the United States.”
  • US warned that any attempt to violate US intellectual property will impede “foreign investment in the Antiguan economy, particularly in high-tech industries.”
  • US still contends it “never intended [gambling and betting services] to be included” in WTO agreement.

United States trade officials have decried attempts by Antigua & Barbuda to collect on an annual $21 million World Trade Organization judgment in a recent statement to the WTO’s Dispute Settlement Body, terming it “government-authorized piracy.”

The United States protest follows an announcement by Antigua that it would propose a plan for collecting an existing 2007 WTO judgment over the United States’ failure to honor its previous GATS (General Agreement on Trade in Service) commitment regarding international online gambling.

The GATS agreement dated to a late-'90s addition of previous agreements called the “Uruguay Round,” included online gambling. The industry, then in its infancy, was later claimed by the United States to have been included by mistake.

The US also raised ethical and moral protests in this trade skirmish which have lasted for the better part of a decade. However, those protests were soundly rejected by the WTO in multiple appeals and hearings.

Antigua was eventually awarded an annual $21 million judgment in abrogated intellectual property rights, giving it international rights to produce and sell US-copyrighted merchandise without having to reimburse US-based rights holders.