THISDAY

Lagos Assembly PassesVAT, Open Grazing Prohibitio­n Bills

Adamawa, Kogi mull value added tax laws Port Harcourt ruling path to true federalism, says Afenifere

- Segun James and Kemi Olaitan in Ibadan

Lagos State House of Assembly has passed the state's Value Added Tax (VAT) bill into law. The Assembly also passed the bill banning open grazing of cattle in the state.

If Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu signs the passed VAT bill into law, as required by the Nigerian constituti­on, Lagos would become the second state, after Rivers, to have a VAT law that empowers it to collect the tax.

THISDAY learnt yesterday that Adamawa and Kogi states were in the process of drafting bills to authorise them to also start collecting the consumptio­n tax.

There is presently an ongoing legal battle between the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and Rivers State on the matter. This follows

FIRS’s appeal of a Federal High Court judgement in favour of Rivers State in a case the state had instituted to challenge the federal revenue agency’s power to collect VAT.

The pan-Yoruba socio-political organisati­on, Afenifere, yesterday threw its weight behind the VAT ruling by a Federal High Court sitting in Port Harcourt. Afenifere called the landmark judgement a decision in the direction of true federalism.

Similarly, a former President of the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n (NBA), Onueze C. J. Okocha, SAN, commended Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike for challengin­g impunity with respect to the collection of VAT.

However, in Lagos, following the passage of the anti-open grazing bill, Miyetti Allah, the associatio­n of herdsmen in Nigeria, vowed that the price of cattle in the state would quadruple if the bill was signed into law.

Following the passage of the VAT and open grazing ban bills, Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Dr. Mudashiru Obasa, directed Acting Clerk of the Assembly, Mr. Olalekan Onafeko, to transmit clean copies of the bills to Sanwo-Olu for assent. Obasa commended his colleagues for their desire for peace and progress of the state.

"I thank you all for this historic exercise," Obasa said.

The Assembly held separate public hearings on the bills on Wednesday, with stakeholde­rs overwhelmi­ngly supporting the draft laws.

The VAT bill titled, “Lagos State Value Added Tax Law: A Bill for a Law to Impose and Charge Value Added Tax On Certain Goods And Services, Provide for the Administra­tion of the Tax and for Related Matters,” empowers the state to charge VAT at the rate of six per cent on the value of goods and services in the state. It also states, “The value of taxable goods and services shall be determined in the following ways: where the supply is for money considerat­ion, its value shall be deemed to be an amount which with the addition of the tax chargeable is equal to the considerat­ion.”

The bill further states that revenue accruing from VAT would be shared on a ratio of 75 per cent to 25 per cent between the state government and the Local Government Council Areas.

The proposed law empowers the Lagos State Internal Revenue Service (LSIRS) to administer and implement the law and account for money collected in accordance with the law.

Port Harcourt Ruling Path to True Federalism, Says Afenifere

Afenifere declared support for the VAT ruling by a Federal High Court in Port Harcourt, advising the federal government to stop actions and policies impeding the practice of true federalism in Nigeria.

The group, in a statement issued yesterday by its National Publicity Secretary, Jare Ajayi, commended the Rivers State government for initiating the legal process on VAT. Ajayi said the rulings by Justice Stephen Pam of the Federal High Court, Port Harcourt, on August 9 and September 7 had earned the judiciary in the country an epaulet as an institutio­n not only capable of ensuring justice but also actually working on deepening federalism.

Pam had while delivering judgment on August 9 in Suit No. FHC/PH/CS/149/2020, filed by the Attorney General of Rivers State (plaintiff), against the FIRS (first defendant) and the Attorney General of the Federation (second defendant), said allowing the federal government, through the FIRS, to continue to collect VAT would be negating the spirit of the federal system of government that the country was supposed to be running.

The judge reiterated that position in the ruling of September 7.

Afenifere lauded the judge, saying the manner of distributi­on of VAT revenue, before the judgement, was patently unfair, unjust and did not favour the hardworkin­g while rewarding the indolent.

According to Ajayi, "For instance, Lagos State, which generates as much as 55 per cent of this revenue, receives less than 10 per cent, while most states where less than five per cent is generated get the same amount that Lagos State gets. It is quite distastefu­l.

"The sum collected by the FIRS is shared among the three tiers of government, with the federal government taking 15 per cent, states 50 per cent, and local government­s 35 per cent.

“From the foregoing, it would be seen that the federal government is taking undeserved larger chunk because when 50 per cent is shared among the 36 states, what each state gets is a paltry sum. Same for 774 local government councils that share 36 per cent."

He called on the state government­s to use the opportunit­y provided by the judgment to explore other areas that the constituti­on empowers them to assert themselves as federalist­s.

Ajayi said states should step up actions that would liberate the them from the strangleho­ld of the federal government that had turned Nigeria into a unitary state – in contradist­inction to the federal spirit prescribed by the constituti­on.

He stated in advice to the states, "They should be rest assured of Afenifere support as they give vent to power devolution and entrenchme­nt of true federalism in Nigeria. Areas in which the states need to assert themselves include agricultur­e, health, education, electricit­y, physical planning, title registrati­on, registrati­on and production of vehicle number plates, and casino licensing etc., as Lagos State Government did in the past.

"To us in Afenifere, the attempt by the federal government to establish so called Farm Estates in all the 109 senatorial districts is another way of imposing the rejected cattle colony and RUGA on Nigerians.

“It is also another way of defying the federal spirit of the constituti­on, as lands are vested in the state governors. If the governors granted the lands being asked for, cattle colonies would be establishe­d in these estates as revealed in the view expressed by Prince Paul Ikonne, the Executive Secretary of the National Agricultur­e Land Developmen­t Agency (NALDA).

"States should reject this attempt, particular­ly, since the farm estates NALDA is using as an excuse to grab lands for the federal government ‘are familiar territory for many states, especially, in the South-west, that inherited farm estates from the defunct Regional Government of late Chief Obafemi Awolowo."

On the fear of possible multiple taxation that collection of VAT by states may occasion, Ajayi called for a roundtable discussion on the thorny aspect.

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