LAHORE: Traders protested in front of the Lahore Chamber of
Commerce and Industry (LCCI) on Tuesday against the Federal Board of Revenue
(FBR) for bank account attachments, misuse of discretionary powers under
section 38-B and raids at business premises.
The
LCCI acting president Amjad Ali Jawa, vice president Nasir Hameed Khan and
traders’ leaders from Lahore markets participated in the demonstration. They
chanted slogans against anti-business tactics of the tax machinery and demanded
the FBR to stop misusing Section 38-B of Sales Tax Act, 1990 that was crushing
the business community.
They
said the section was being harmfully used by the officials of the tax
department. The FBR officials were visiting markets and warehouses to
unjustifiably harass the business people.
The
protestors alleged that the FBR officials not only took coercive measures to
raise unlawful tax demands without providing any supporting document, but also
carried all the available records with them.
The
participants of the meeting were of the view that teams from the tax department
should visit the markets, if necessary, but they should immediately stop
harassing the business community. They said that if there was an urgent need
for stocktaking and ascertaining the sales tax liability of any particular
business unit, the FBR officials should take the association concerned or the
LCCI on board.
All
the participants said FBR should stop harassing filers as non-filers. Those who
were outside the tax net were not accounted for at all, which discouraged
businesses to come into the tax net, they added.
They
said that attaching bank accounts for recovery of outstanding dues is hampering
business growth and tarnishing the business-friendly image of the government.
They said that bank accounts should not be attached without prior notice to the
taxpayer and after seeking approval in writing of the commissioner, in the
light of the reply submitted by the taxpayer.
The
recovery should be after the decision of the Tribunal and not before that. They
said that unfortunately if the FBR initiates a recovery case, the taxpayer is
not allowed to defend as FBR itself is the complainant and judge.
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