ICPC, National Assembly probe Arab contractors, Tower Aluminium, 113 others for tax evasion

Semiu Salami
Semiu Salami

Senators and members of the House of Representatives under the auspices of Anti- Money Laundering and Cyber Security Coalition, AMLCSC, are working with the Independent Corrupt Practices and other offences Commission, ICPC, to prosecute about 115 tax offenders.

The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Pensions Senator Aloysius Etok, who made this known at a press briefing at the National Assembly last Thursday, said that Senators in the course of investigations, found that about “50 contracting firms working with Federal Ministry of Works operate with forged tax certificates”.

Senator Etok said companies that might come under the hammer of the National Assembly for tax evasion amounting to billions of naira, included Arab Contractors, a road construction firm, Septa Energy, Tower Aluminium, B. Stabilini and 112 others.

Etok disclosed that the National Assembly was pushing for the prosecution of companies with high rate of casualised workers and fraudulent expatriate quota practices by foreign construction and some oil and gas companies in the country.

The lawmaker warned that if this trend of sustained evasion of taxes by companies continued agencies, like Universal Basic Education Commission, UBEC, Tertiary Education Trust Fund, TETFUND, Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, would fold up, as according to him, the agencies depended on taxes for survival.

The ICPC in a document submitted to the Senate, stated that “In view of the financial intelligence analysis carried out by the commission on the plethora of petitions received on issues bothering on Tax Clearance Certificates scam, investigation led to uncovering of tax evasion, nonpayment of Capital Gain Taxes, non remittance of Withholding Tax and Value Added Tax”.

The commission he said regretted the serial breach of the procurement process was with the collaboration of procurement officers.

“Procurement is an area that has long been recognised as being particularly vulnerable to corruption because public procurement through government contracting represents a substantial percentage of the economy” the ICPC submitted.

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