Wealthy Kenyans filed to return Sh118 billion assets from
foreign countries in the final year of a tax
pardon, official data shows.
pardon, official data shows.
The value was declared for repatriation in the period ended June 2019 after the Treasury extended the amnesty process by a year.
The
Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) received 3,543 amnesty applications in
the period, a report submitted to the National Assembly’s Committee on
Finance and National Planning shows.
In extending the
time for declaring and returning the riches stashed abroad, suspended
Treasury secretary Henry Rotich had cited lack of clarity on whether the
cash repatriated home should be subjected to provisions of Proceeds of
Crime and Anti-Money Laundering Act.
That law requires
persons transacting Sh1 million and more to declare the source of their
wealth to the Financial Reporting Centre, the anti-money laundering
agency.
“The amnesty was extended for a further year
and assurance given that once the money is transferred, there will be no
follow-up on the source of the funds,” KRA says in the report.
“The amendment was meant to allow more time for persons seeking
amnesty and create favourable environment for repatriation of funds.”
The exemption, however, excluded people who accumulated riches abroad from crimes of terrorism, poaching and drug trafficking.
“That
was supposed to be a sweetener, but practicability part of it is that
it was not possible because if I bring the money, you may not tell the
source,” said Mr Stephen Waweru, a senior tax services manager at KPMG.
“They may not have fully succeeded because of a bit of mistrust around
whether it was a way for KRA to net them after they declare and go for
them in future,”
The income declared from wealth
abroad, including homes, during the year-long extension appears to be
lower than what had been disclosed between mid-2017 and 2018.
The
KRA, in a statement to the Business Daily in May, said about Sh1
trillion had been declared by 16,000 applicants since the window opened.
The
blanket amnesty was initially to end in December 2017, but was extended
twice to June 2019 following a delay by the taxman to issue guidelines
on repatriation of wealth stashed in offshore accounts.
The
forgiveness on tax and accruing penalty and interest initially targeted
foreign-earned income up to the period ended December 2016, but this
was pushed forward to December 2017.
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