Mr James Rugemalira, Director, VIP Engineering and (right) Mr Harbinder
Singh Sethi of Pan African Power Solutions Tanzania Lmited. PHOTO |
FILE
By The Citizen Reporters
In Summary
The TRA’s Director of Education and Taxpayer Service
Mr Richard Kayombo confirmed to The Citizen on Monday that IPTL owes
TRA, but declined to disclose further details.
Dodoma/Dar es Salaam. The
Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) has attached bank accounts belonging to
Independent Power Tanzania Limited(IPTL) in its bid to recover unpaid
tax amounting to Sh26 billion, The Citizen has learnt.
Recently, The Citizen reported that during the
transaction between IPTL and Pan Africa Power Solutions Tanzania Limited
(PAP), which culminated to the release of $122million Escrow money by
the Bank of Tanzania (BoT), value added tax wasn’t paid as per the law.
PAP is the company that claims to have purchased IPTL.
All capacity charges paid by Tanzania Electric
Supply Company (Tanesco) to independent power producers (IPPs) is
subject to 18 per cent Value Added Tax.
Reports obtained by The Citizen from Dodoma show
that TRA has taken the move after waiting in vain for nearly four months
without getting any VAT payments from IPTL.
Speaking to The Citizen yesterday, the Public
Accounts Committee Chairman, Mr Zitto Kabwe confirmed the move. He told
The Citizen: “TRA Acting Commissioner General, Mr Rished Bade, briefed
the Public Accounts Committee on Sunday in Dodoma that the agency has
attached IPTL accounts due to tax liabilities.”
“We asked him about the measures taken by TRA to
recover the Sh26billion, which were supposed to be paid as VAT in Escrow
money released to PAP…You remember that one of the terms of
references(ToR) in an investigation ordered by PAC was on VAT.” Mr Kabwe
told The Citizen.
The TRA’s Director of Education and Taxpayer
Service Mr Richard Kayombo confirmed to The Citizen on Monday that IPTL
owes TRA, but declined to disclose further details.
“We are prohibited by the law to give detailed
information of any taxpayer being investigated…But it is true that IPTL
owes the Authority certain amounts of tax,” said Mr Kayombo.
The Citizen has learnt that last year before the
then TRA’s Commissioner General, Mr Harry Kitilya, retired, he wrote to
the Central Bank of Tanzania asking the bank to deduct VAT on $122
million, which were in Escrow account.
But, it wasn’t clear why the VAT money wasn’t deducted as requested by TRA during the process to pay PAP.
The Citizen couldn’t independently verify why TRA
decided to attach IPTL bank accounts instead of PAP, which was actually
the company that got paid the Escrow money.
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