The House of
Representatives ad-hoc committee investigating the operations of
telecommunications service providers and vendors yesterday summoned some heads
of telecoms companies in the country over alleged non-payment of taxes and the
require
d percentages of their profits to the Federal Government.
According to
the chairman of the committee, Ahmed Abu, those invited are managing directors
of 9mobile, Etisalat Nigeria and Globacom Nigeria.
He said the
summon became necessary following the failure of the companies to turn up for
the various hearings of the companies, despite repeated letters of invitation
sent to them. He warned that further disregard for the invitation might compel
the committee to issue bench warrants against the companies.
“This is not
about me. It is about the House of Representatives, and we are representing
Nigerians. A situation where invitations would be issued to telecommunications
companies over issues that affect Nigerians and they fail to appear before us
is unfortunate.
“What we are
saying is that if things are done right, the creative industry, for instance,
can generate so much revenues for the players in it and the government,” he
said.
The lawmaker
wondered why the National Lottery Trust Fund has, as required by law, been
unable to rake in appreciable revenues for the government based on existing
legislations regulating the operations of the firms and lottery activities in
the country.
But in his
submission, the Executive Secretary of the fund, Habu Gumel, said the
government had made N530m in the last nine years from the companies doing
business in the country.
He blamed
the poor remittances on “under-declaration of remittances by operators and lack
of credible database to ascertain the actual and precise amount due to
government as returns for good causes. “
Gumel’s
position was supported by the representative of the National Lottery Regulatory
Commission (NLRC), Okechukwu Odunna, who decried the mechanisms for tracking
businesses of the telecommunications firms from where parts of the proceeds are
to be measured by the government.
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