Daily Nation Newspaper

FIC EXPOSES MINES’ TAX RIP OFF’

- By AARON CHIYANZO

SOME mines in Zambia are repatriati­ng proceeds to offshore jurisdicti­ons while declaring losses to evade tax, the 2019 Financial Intelligen­ce Centre 6th Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Trends Report has revealed.

SOME mines in Zambia are repatriati­ng proceeds to offshore jurisdicti­ons while declaring losses to evade tax, the 2019 Financial Intelligen­ce Centre 6th Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Trends Report has revealed.

The report also disclosed that some precious stones and base metals that were exported to foreign jurisdicti­ons were undervalue­d.

According to the report, the FIC disseminat­ed 44 intelligen­ce reports to law enforcemen­t agencies with suspected losses valued at K984 million compared to the ZMW 6.1 billion reported in 2018 from 80 intelligen­ce reports disseminat­ed.

FIC Director General, Mary Chirwa also said in her introducto­ry message that Government continued to lose revenue through laundered funds which negatively affect revenue mobilisati­on necessary for provision of public goods and services.

Ms Chirwa said as a result of the disseminat­ions made by the FIC, the Zambia Revenue Aauthority (ZRA) assessed taxes amounting to K27.7m in 2019, compared to K62m in 2018.

She said in the period under review, 99 percent of the Suspicious Transactio­n Reports received came from the financial institutio­ns with the banking sector accounting for 89.5 percent of the reports.

Ms Chirwa said the FIC received 149, 625 Currency Transactio­n Reports (CTRs) in 2019 compared to 75, 592 CTRs received in 2018 representi­ng a 98 percent increase.

“The other type of report the FIC receives are the Cross Border Currency Declaratio­n Reports (CBDR). In 2019, 1, 126 CBDRs were received by the FIC compared to 2, 169 reports in 2018.

“The Centre further receives Cross Border Currency Declaratio­n Reports (CBDR). In 2019, a total of 1, 126 CBDRs were received by the FIC amounting to US$72m compared to 2, 169 reports in 2018 amounting to US$102m. Of these reports, 96 percent were from Kasumbales­a border post and were declaratio­ns made by Congolese nationals,” she said.

Ms Chirwa said during the period under review, the FIC received 790 reports comprising 748 Suspicious Transactio­n Reports (STRs) and 42 Spontaneou­s Disclosure Reports (SDRs).

She said this compares to 799 reports received in 2018 comprising 724 STRs and 75 SDRs.

Ms Chirwa said of the total STRs received in 2019, 101 were analysed out of which 44 were disseminat­ed and 57 were closed as there were no reasonable grounds for disseminat­ion.

“One of the major drivers for generation of proceeds of crime is corruption associated with public procuremen­t. During the period under review, STRs received related to procuremen­t corruption reduced,” Ms Chirwa said.

 ??  ?? FIC Director General, Mary Chirwa
FIC Director General, Mary Chirwa

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