HUNDREDS of people yesterday turned up for verification of Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) in Dar es Salaam as the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) reiterated that there will be no more deadline extension for the exercise.
TRA Director for Taxpayer Services and
Education, Mr Richard Kayombo, told the ‘Daily News’ in Dar es Salaam
yesterday that TIN holders who did not meet the deadline yesterday would
not get access to services which entail TIN.
“After today’s deadline, we will block
all unverified TINs, therefore, TIN holders who did not validate their
TIN will not get access to the services which involve TIN,” said the TRA
director for taxpayer services.
Mr Kayombo said it was vital to conduct
TIN verification exercise to include some important personal details in
TRA database, pointing out that the personal details were lacking in
existing TIN. “The verification exercise also aims to unravel the
problem of double TIN possession to some people,” he added.
He said the TINs verification would be
extended to other regions after finalising the exercise in Dar es
Salaam, saying TRA will soon issue the TIN verification timetable for
other regions. According to Mr Kayombo, failure to verify information
will lead to removal of the TIN in the system and it will no longer be
valid.
“TIN holders who did not validate their information during the TIN verification will have to report to TRA offices,” he said.
The deadline for TIN verification
exercise in Dar es Salaam was extended to January 31 after the first
deadline last November saw many city dwellers failing to meet the
deadline.
TIN holders were supposed to verify
their information at any designated centres. Survey by this newspaper
revealed that that there was a large number of people who showed up for
the verification process yesterday, which was the deadline of the
exercise in Dar es Salaam.
Acting TRA officer-incharge at the
National Stadium TIN verification centre, Mr John Lusheleja, revealed
that a big number of people relaxed after time for the verification
exercise was extended
. “Our centre can attend 700 people per
day, but after it was announced that the exercise will be extended, very
few people attended before others started showing up in big numbers in
the closing days of last week,” he told reporters.
According to him, from November 31, last
year to mid-January, this year, the centre experienced a shortage of
people who showed up for the exercise, with the attendance average that
ranged at 700 saw only between 100 and 150 people attending.
On her part, the Millenium Tower TIN
verification centre officer-in-charge, Ms Evelyne Lwendo, said she was
not surprised by the response of people who filled her centre as they
experienced the same situation during the first days before the exercise
was extended.
“The exercise was supposed to end on
October 15, last year, but when the deadline approached we experienced
big numbers of people who turned-up for the exercise on October 10.
No comments :
Post a Comment