Sowetan

‘Culling units let off crime syndicates and celebs’

Millions of rands wasted in process

- By Natasha Marrian

The South African Revenue Service (Sars) high court litigation unit‚ as well as another dealing with the illicit economy‚ were culled in the farreachin­g restructur­ing during suspended commission­er Tom Moyane’s tenure.

That resulted in the loss of “hundreds of millions of rands a year”‚ the Sars commission of inquiry into governance and administra­tion chaired by retired judge Robert Nugent in Pretoria heard on Wednesday.

This has dented the tax agency’s ability to act against high-profile‚ high-risk taxpayers as well as organised criminal syndicates and players in the illicit economy‚ the commission was told.

Dion Nannoolal‚ senior manager responsibl­e for high-value audit debt collection‚ described how the restructur­ing had fragmented his unit and made his job extremely difficult.

This is because the restructur­ing decimated the “end-toend” approach that Sars had previously had in place to deal with high-profile and complex tax matters.

Pieter Engelbrech­t‚ who was the head of centralise­d projects at Sars‚ described his unit as highly successful‚ which dealt with high-net-worth individual­s who used offshore entities and special-purpose vehicles to hide money. It also dealt with illicit financial flows and organised crime.

After the restructur­ing he was informed that his position had been dissolved‚ yet senior management at Sars was not aware of the decision.

From a successful unit – which‚ aside from collecting billions in revenue‚ also helped boost compliance among the taxpayers it focused on (a high risk and complex sector) – it was effectivel­y dissolved.

Engelbrech­t told the inquiry that since 2016‚ he had not been involved in the majority of cases. He said that particular function had become fragmented‚ and no decisions were taken on those cases or they were not done so timeously.

Nannoolal described a similar scenario‚ where the change in structure resulted in weakened legal capacity at Sars‚ which in turn made it difficult to collect outstandin­g debts.

He was not at liberty to name individual taxpayers in the inquiry but described specific cases. In one case‚ dubbed Project J‚ he described how he had been waiting for approval to move on an “illicit economy taxpayer”.

In another project involving the gaming industry – dubbed Project B – he had been waiting a year for approval.

He described a “celebrity taxpayer” that Sars should have sequestrat­ed‚ but he received an “odd response” from the tax agency’s legal counsel‚ which is no longer a unit: it has been decentrali­sed and reports to regional managers.

As a result of the weakened legal capacity at Sars‚ Nannoolal said he was forced by a court to issue a compliance certificat­e to a taxpayer‚ while knowing it was not compliant due to a weak submission by a legal consultant.

 ?? / TREVOR SAMSON ?? Suspended SARS commission­er Tom Moyane, whose tenure was marked by several accusation­s of misconduct and corruption, some of which are subject to ongoing investigat­ion and probes.
/ TREVOR SAMSON Suspended SARS commission­er Tom Moyane, whose tenure was marked by several accusation­s of misconduct and corruption, some of which are subject to ongoing investigat­ion and probes.
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