On the 20th of October 2015
Ekiti State capital staged peaceful protests against what they described as
“outrageous taxes” imposed on them by the state government.
Shops belonging to the Igbo
traders, along the state secretariat road and a branch of Zenith Bank, NNPC
retail petrol station were shut down by officials of the Board of Internal
Revenue, BIR, in an operation that commenced at about 9.00 am.
The traders marched from
their shops to the BIR headquarters opposite Old Governor’s Office, forcing the
frightened civil servants working at BIR to shut their doors against the
protesters and didn’t open until 4.00 pm closing time.
Special Adviser to the
Governor on Revenue, Ropo Ogunjobi, was not available to address the protesting
Igbo traders.
Explaining the reason for
their protest, the traders claimed they entered into agreement with BIR for a
tax rate of N5,500 only for the officials of the tax agency to storm their
business offices yesterday morning claiming that the agreed tax no longer
subsists.
Chairman of Secretariat
Road Traders Association, Uchenna Madunagu, told Vanguard that the BIR imposed
taxes ranged between N75,000 and N180,000, which they described as outrageous.
Madunagu said the traders
were forced out of their shops by stern-looking armed policemen, and defence
officers clutching chains and padlocks with which their shops were sealed.
The traders boss claimed
that most of the traders still had cash, passbooks, cheques and keys to their
homes inside their shops.
Secretary of the
association, Chizom Unegbu, urged Fayose to reduce the taxes imposed on the
traders saying there should be no selective application of taxes in the state.
Unegbu expressed
disappointment that Ogunjobi was not in office to attend to them declaring
their readiness to continue their protests until government accedes to their
demands.
Ogunjobi, while reacting to
the development said the question of the traders paying N5,500 never emanated from
his office.
He said: “Those traders
were economical with the truth, N5,500 they are talking about is not from this
office because what we are talking about now is the Personal Income Tax.
“We have assessed them,
they should go and collect the assessment notice and go to the bank and pay
their taxes.”
Meantime, Governor Ayodele
Fayose has declared that for battle against corruption to be successful, there
is the need for a complete over hauling of the nation’s judiciary.
Fayose lamented that the
Nigerian judiciary, which ought to be the last hope of common man has been
compromised, saying, most judgements in Nigeria today are monetised. If the
battle against corruption can be won between the Bar and the Bench, it will be
won in the society.
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