Rob
Shuter, Chief Executive
Officer MTN
MTN
Nigeria Tuesday faulted the Attorney General of the Federation, AGF,
on the $2billion tax debt which he alleged the telco owed the federal
government. MTN said AGF's calculations were wrong.
It
also claimed the Attorney General had notified it that his office
made a high-level calculation and arrived at approximately $2.0
billion in taxes relating to the importation of foreign equipment and
payments to foreign suppliers over the last 10 years, which he said
MTN Nigeria should have paid.
Funso
Aina, MTNs Public Relations Manager,also disclosed that after
the notice, the AGF allowed it the opportunity to do a
self-assessment of the taxes in this regard that have been actually
paid.
According
to him, "MTN Nigeria in compliance to the request, submitted a
comprehensive documentation to the office of the AGF in August 2018
detailing initial assessment of the full period which indicates that
total payments made to the tax authorities in regard to these foreign
imports and payments in aggregate are $700 million".
Aina
expressed surprise that MTN was later notified by the office of the
AG last week that they have not accepted the documentation presented
and expressed intention to recover the $2.0bn from MTN Nigeria.
"Based
on the detailed review performed, MTN Nigeria believes it has fully
settled all amounts owing under the taxes in question"
Although
he never disclosed details, he said "there are valid reasons for
the differences between the actual payments and the AG high-level
assessment".
MTN,
has had several allegations against it in recent weeks including one
from the Central bank of Nigeria, CBN on improper foreign exchange
repatriation.
On
the CBN allegations, MTN Corporate Relations Executive Mr Tobe Okigbo
said that MTN continues to strenuously deny the allegations and has
provided further clarity on the company’s position.
He
said MTN equally strenuously rejects the findings of the Attorney
General’s investigation and believes it has fully settled all
amounts owing under the taxes in question.
"It
is both regrettable and disconcerting that despite the historic
engagements with the Nigerian authorities by MTN Nigeria, the senate
investigation into the CCI matter, and the multiple tax assessments
done by the Nigerian tax authorities over many years that were
satisfactorily concluded, that these matters are being reopened.
“From
the CBN’s own letter and subsequent statements, it is clear that
there is no dispute that the capital captured in MTN’s books and
for which CCIs were issued was imported into Nigeria, and this is
acknowledged explicitly by the CBN. It is equally clear that Nigerian
law provides for guaranteed unconditional transferability of funds
through an Authorised dealer in freely convertible currency relating
to dividends or profits attributable to the investment, payments and
in respect of loan servicing where a foreign loan has been obtained.
“All
dividend repatriation done by MTN Nigeria to its shareholders was
done on the basis of its equity capital and all the historic
dividends were declared against valid equity CCIs and in fact no
preference dividends were declared and no interest in respect of
these preference shares was paid. This means that it is incorrect to
suggest that the conversion of a shareholder loan to preference
shares has any relation to the repatriation of dividends. The two are
simply not connected and we are trying to understand this position
that the Central Bank has taken.” he added.
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