The Guardian (Nigeria)

FG reneges on plan to stop 5% VAT in air fares AU honours Aregbesola for good governance

FIRS unaware of Executive Order

- Bywole Oyebade

THE Federal Government appears to have reneged on the plan to suspend mandatory five per cent Value Added Tax (VAT) on airfares in the country as contained in the Executive Order issued in June.

The order is yet to be implemente­d, even as the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) that collects taxes on behalf of the government claims to be unaware of such directive two months on.

At a meeting of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo with airlines operators, he pledged to address “killing” multiple taxation and set up of a presidenti­al review committee for that purpose.

Airlines operators in Nigeria, unlike their counterpar­ts around the world, pay no fewer than 37 sundry charges, among which are a five per cent Value Added Tax and another five per cent Passengers Service Charge.

As at the last check, Nigeria remains the only country that still charges VAT on air years.

Asaolu, who was accompanie­d by the AUECOSOCC Head of Secretaria­t in Nigeria, Ambassador Chinwe Maduke; the Ambassador of Antigua Barbudi in Nigeria, Wallace Williams; and AU-ECOSOCC Attaché, Mrs. Kamsi Onyeuche, said Aregbesola had breathed light into governance through his monumental achievemen­ts. He described Osun’s infrastruc­tural developmen­t as unpreceden­ted in the history of any state in Africa, adding that it was worthy of emulation.

According to Asaolu, the AU is proud of Aregbesola’s achievemen­ts in all sectors.

The AU-ECOSOCC official said his administra­tion justified the mandate and confidence reposed in it by Osun people, contending that the state under Aregbesola had taken the lead in human and capital developmen­t.

Asaolu, who said his team was in the state to understudy, inspect and assess the good works of Aregbesola’s administra­tion, acknowledg­ed the government for meeting internatio­nal standard, specificat­ion and expectatio­n in its projects, particular­ly on roads, schools, health and security. transport. The VAT plus 36 other charges, according to the airlines, account for at least 40 per cent of total revenue, leaving the carriers heavily indebted, in financial distress or both, in most cases.

The Guardian’s monitoring of airfares in the last two months showed no downward review of cost. While airfares remain stable on some routes, the prices went up by some notches on most others, especially the heavy traffic Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt routes.

The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Med-view Airlines Plc, Muneer Bankole, said he heard of the removal, but it was yet to be implemente­d.

“Since we heard about it, we have started talking to FIRS, but they are still chasing us (to pay VAT).”

He said good as the intention seemed, nothing had really changed to realign Nigerian aviation with global best practices.

“Definitely, you know that commercial operation like airline has internatio­nal connection; you don’t pay VAT anywhere in the world. So, let us do the right things here. All these charges; VAT and taxes don’t apply to aviation because they don’t help the airlines’ business. That is why our airlines are nose-diving and government agencies just sit down looking.

“They (regulatory agencies) should get out of this colonial approach. Every government agency should go out to get money and work as real service provider. That is the way to go. When you say you are committed to paying five per cent to this, four per cent to that, three per cent to another and so on, then you are still in the colonial era,” Bankole said.

Dana Air Media and Communicat­ions Manager, Kingsley Ezenwa, said the airline would be more than happy to plough back the gains of VAT removal to the business and ticket fares subsidy, “but that may not happen soon.”

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