U.S. LAWMAKERS TO BE EDUCATED
9 November 2007
Antiguan visit will not be an easy trip
Antigua plans to use an upcoming Caribbean business
conference attended by U.S. legislators to press its
case on discriminatory online gambling legislation in
the U.S.
Antiguan officials and politicians plan to raise their
tiny nation's long-running trade battle with the United
States over Internet gambling as about 10 members of the
U.S. Congress gather next week for an annual Caribbean
business conference.
Antigua has accused the U.S. of crippling its gambling
industry by effectively banning Americans from making
online wagers, and the officials will raise the issue at
the conference and in private meetings with members of
Congress, Finance Minister Dr. Errol Cort said.
The government also plans to invite the lawmakers on a
tour of the Caribbean nation's Financial Services
Regulatory Commission and some Internet gaming
companies, Cort said.
Antigua hopes to prove to the visiting politicians that
"...we do have the capacity to adequately regulate these
gaming operations," Cort told The Associated Press.
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. Antigua, which has a
population of about 70 000, filed a complaint with the
World Trade Organisation and is seeking US$3.4 billion
in trade sanctions.
Online Casino News courtesy of
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