
-
Champion jockey Oisin Murphy charged with drink driving
-
Iran strikes damage hard to assess under Israeli military censorship
-
Argentina to try 10 in absentia over 1994 bombing of Jewish center
-
Spain court suspends huge Ryanair 'abusive practices' fine
-
Top US court allows states to defund largest abortion provider
-
Nigeria's Tinubu signs major tax overhaul
-
COP30 to be held in Amazonian city despite accommodation concerns: CEO
-
Netanyahu seeks to postpone trial summons after Trump backing
-
South Africa's Sundowns make impact felt at Club World Cup
-
Frenchman who robbed Kim Kardashian dies of cancer aged 69
-
Vehicle hits pedestrians near primary school in Beijing
-
After NATO deal, how far will EU go for trade peace with Trump?
-
Pentagon chief backs Trump on success of Iran strikes
-
Mbappe files harassment complaint against PSG
-
New chief Coventry says IOC will launch gender working group
-
US panel replaced under Trump backs new shot for kids
-
Roblox's Grow a Garden explodes online video game numbers
-
Bezos wedding festivities kick off in Venice
-
US stocks rise, dollar slides as Trump eyes new Fed boss
-
Europe court condemns France over police racial profiling
-
Cristiano Ronaldo to stay at Al Nassr until 2027
-
Nissanka ton puts Sri Lanka on top in second Bangladesh Test
-
Spain PM alleges 'genocide' in Gaza as rescuers say 56 killed
-
US Independence Day event no threat to Hong Kong security: consulate chief
-
UN air service slashes fleet by nearly a quarter
-
Napoleon collection sells at auction for $10 mn
-
16 dead, thousands of businesses destroyed after Kenya protests
-
In Finnish border town, worry mounts over Russian military build-up
-
Krejcikova suffers injury scare ahead of Wimbledon defence
-
For Senegal women's basketball team, show goes on without US visas
-
Spain PM alleges 'genocide' in Gaza as rescuers say 35 killed
-
Liverpool sign Bournemouth defender Kerkez
-
Archer back in England Test squad after four-year absence
-
Khamenei says Trump 'exaggerated' impact of US strikes on nuclear sites
-
Spaceship carrying astronauts from India, Poland, Hungary, docks with ISS
-
Europe rights court condemns France over police racial profiling
-
Dollar slides as Trump eyes new Fed boss
-
Spotted: endangered leopard in Bangladesh
-
India recovers data from black boxes after deadly crash
-
Verdict expected in Italy 'forever chemicals' trial
-
China hosts Iran, Russia defence ministers against backdrop of 'turmoil'
-
Ireland's 'chill' Sheehan to captain new-look Lions against Force
-
US to offer new defense of strikes on Iran nuclear sites
-
'Mass scale' abuses in Cambodia scam centres: Amnesty
-
Stocks mixed with eyes on Mideast, dollar hit by Trump Fed comment
-
Pools and slides as North Korea set to open 'world class' tourist resort
-
Ireland's Sheehan to captain new-look Lions against Force
-
H&M sales fall in second quarter on stronger currency
-
Esports a pathway back to normality for Ukrainian war veterans
-
The reluctant fame of Gazan photojournalist Motaz Azaiza

Amid Trump trade tensions, WTO remains crippled arbiter
While US President Donald Trump unleashes trade wars and tariffs, the system for settling such disputes within the World Trade Organization has been paralysed for years -- by the United States.
Having returned to the White House, Trump has imposed a 10 percent tariff hike on Chinese goods, with Beijing immediately retaliating with tariffs on US imports of energy, cars and machinery parts.
China said Tuesday that it would file a complaint with the WTO over the "malicious" US levies -- but that move is likely to hit a dead end, unless Beijing and Washington resolve the spat of their own accord.
- Obama, Trump, Biden roadblock -
The WTO was founded in 1995 as a successor to GATT, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade dating back to 1948.
The process for resolving a dispute at the Geneva-based global trade body goes through several stages.
When a complaint is brought, consultations are initiated between the members at odds with each other.
If no agreement is reached, the complainant can request the establishment of a special panel, made up of three to five experts. Countries can appeal against the panel's ruling.
But the WTO's Appellate Body, composed of seven specialists in international law and trade, has not been able to handle any new cases since December 2019: its seats remain empty due to the United States blocking nominations.
This practice began under US president Barack Obama, continued throughout Trump's first term, and carried on under his successor Joe Biden.
Washington accuses the Appellate Body of over-interpreting international trade rules and not respecting WTO deadlines for completing cases.
The United States also insists the body's decisions must not encroach on "national security".
In 2022, the WTO's members decided to hold discussions aimed at having a fully operational system up and running by 2024 -- but no agreement has yet been reached.
In the meantime, a number of WTO members, including the European Union and China, have developed an alternative appellate process allowing some cases move forward.
Among those cases is a spat between Brussels and Colombia over Bogota's anti-dumping duties on imports of frozen fries from three EU nations.
But the United States has not signed up.
So while this temporary system works well for the participating countries, it does not prevent other WTO members from continuing to file appeals to the moribund Appellate Body -- effectively leaving the cases in limbo.
- Into the void -
Currently, 32 dispute panel rulings "have been appealed into the void", according to the WTO.
As a result, the decisions of the agency's Dispute Settlement Body (DSB) do not apply because the appeal is up in the air.
Of these 32 appeals, two were filed by the United States -- against China and Turkey -- and 11 were filed against the United States, including three by China, two by Canada and two by Turkey.
And although the Appellate Body is not functioning, a number of countries are continuing to launch initial complaints, as China has now done.
The last time Washington brought a dispute in the first instance was in July 2019, in an agricultural spat with India. The two countries have since reached an agreement.
When a country is rebuked by the dispute settlement body, it must implement the experts' recommendations within a so-called reasonable timeframe set by the DSB. Sanctions can be imposed if the country does not fulfil its obligations.
S.Abdullah--SF-PST