Cape Times

Museveni defends social media tax

- Elias Biryabarem­a

UGANDAN President Yoweri Museveni has defended the country’s new social media tax, saying Ugandans were using such platforms for “lying” and squanderin­g the nation’s hard currency on fees to foreign-owned telecoms firms.

In May Uganda’s parliament passed new tax laws that introduced a levy of 200 shillings (R0.71) per day for access to a range of online services.

The platforms that have been identified by the country’s revenue service for the tax include Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, Google Hangouts, YouTube, Skype, Yahoo Messenger and many others.

The tax, collected by mobile phone internet service providers since July 1, is equivalent to about 20 percent of what typical Ugandan users pay for their mobile phone data plans.

In a statement on Twitter, Museveni described social media as a “luxury by those who are enjoying themselves or those who are malicious… all the moral reasons are in favour of that tax.”

Ugandan social media users, he said, were “endlessly donating money to foreign telephone companies through chatting or even lying.”

Unpopular

Uganda’s two biggest telecom firms are owned by South Africa’s MTN Group and India’s Bharti Airtel, while other small players are also mostly foreign-owned.

The tax has proven extremely unpopular with Ugandan mobile phone users, who say it is unfair and stifles free speech.

This week, Amnesty Internatio­nal called on the government to scrap the tax, which it called an attempt to smother dissent disguised as a measure to raise revenue.

In power since 1986, Museveni, 73, has come under increasing criticism from local and internatio­nal rights groups.

Last year parliament, controlled by the ruling party, amended the country’s constituti­on and removed a 75-year age cap for presidenti­al candidates. The opposition says the move effectivel­y cleared the way for him to be president for life.

There has also been anger over a new tax on all transactio­ns on Mobile Money, a popular platform used widely in Uganda and across East Africa to transmit cash.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa