By By Bernard James The Citizen Reporter
In Summary
The hotel operators contend that the levy will
infringe on their basic human and fundamental rights, which are
guaranteed by the constitution.
Dar es Salaam. More than 200 tourist hotels have
petitioned the High Court to stop local governments charging the city
service levy, which is said to have had a devastating effect on their
business.
Crying foul over the levy which, they argue, has
been imposed contrary to the constitution, the hotels have asked the
court to declare the tax unlawful and direct municipalities and city
authorities to stop collecting it.
The Hotels Association of Tanzania (HAT), says it
has gone to court as a last resort after several attempts to resolve the
longstanding tariff dispute failed.
Municipalities and city authorities have come up
with by-laws requiring local tourist hotels and tented camps to pay 0.3
per cent of their quarterly sales as service levy.
They argue that they are just living up to the
spirit of the Local Government Finance Act 2003, which empowers them to
make laws and impose levies in order to raise funds for maintenance of
infrastructure and finance social projects.
This means that local companies will pay the fee every March, June, September and December.
In its petition, though, HAT argues that tourist
hotels and tented camps do not have to pay the levy. Justices Lawrence
Kaduri, Sakieti Kihiyo and Richard Mziray are hearing the petition. The
hotel operators contend that the levy will infringe on their basic human
and fundamental rights, which are guaranteed by the constitution.
They cite article 138 of the constitution, which
prohibits governments from imposing and collecting any form of tax
without an express provision of the law.
And they have accused some local government
authorities of carrying on with “business as usual” despite the fact
that the law is clear on the matter. The Attorney General has asked the
court to dismiss the petition on the grounds that it is legally
incompetent because it was filed under wrong part of the law.
Attempts to resolve the tariff row has not worked
in the interests of the hoteliers. In July last year, HAT wrote to the
Prime Minister’s Office seeking clarification on the disputed levy.
It also asked the PM’s office, which supervises all local governments, to direct the authorities to stop the levy.
But their request hit a snag. The PMO’s office
responded four months later telling the petitioners that hotels are no
longer exempt from paying service levy.
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