The Zimbabwe Independent

China wants nationals monitored

- JULia ndLeLa

CHINEsE ambassador to Zimbabwe, guo shaochun, has called for the establishm­ent of a compliance team composed of government officials, local councillor­s and community representa­tives to monitor activities of foreign companies, including firms from his country.

The monitoring system would look after Zimbabwe’s interests to prevent abuse by foreign investors amid reports that some Chinese companies were flouting the country’s tax laws.

There are also allegation­s that some Chinese companies are issuing receipts in their language instead of English while others are accused of not depositing their foreign currency earnings in banks while evading tax payments.

addressing journalist­s in Harare recently, guo said Chinese firms should comply with Zimbabwean laws.

“We support Zimbabwe in strengthen­ing its regulatory framework and law enforcemen­t. We call for a compliance monitoring team composed of government officials, local councillor­s and community representa­tives to be set up in foreign-invested companies,” he said.

“If anyone finds the possible wrongdoing­s of Chinese companies in Zimbabwe, he or she is welcome to file official complaints to the relevant Zimbabwean authoritie­s, but we suggest such complaints consist of necessary basic elements such as who, when, what and where.”

guo added: “I cannot acknowledg­e your assertions since all the businesses in Zimbabwe are being operated in line with Zimbabwean law. The Chinese embassy is not a law-enforcemen­t agency. We suggest the media interview the Zimbabwean authoritie­s to get the true and comprehens­ive informatio­n”.

He said Chinese companies have been investing and growing with Zimbabwe for years, while creating thousands of jobs and increasing tax revenues and foreign currency inflows.

The ambassador said firms caught wanting should be held accountabl­e, as China did not support companies that flouted the country’s rules and regulation­s.

“all wrongdoing­s should be held accountabl­e. If investment projects are found to be problemati­c, we support the necessary legal response,” he said.

“Recently, we supported the Chinese company Freestones in cancelling their lease agreement for quarry mining. This is an immature programme launched as a result of poor due diligence by more than one party. The Chinese company involved is a victim of wrong decisions.”

“I would like to reiterate that the embassy supports Zimbabwean authoritie­s to establish supervisio­n teams in charge of foreign companies,” guo said.

The Zimbabwe Revenue authority (Zimra) recently garnished for the fourth time in six months, bank accounts of a Chinese contractor, China Internatio­nal Water and Electric Corporatio­n (CIWE), developing Lake gwayi-shangani over non-payment of taxes.

sometime last month, CIWE contract workers went on strike due to late payment of May salaries, according to a presentati­on by Lands, agricultur­e, Fisheries, Water and Rural Developmen­t ministry chief director tinayeshe Mutazu, during a recent tour of the giant dam by the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Budget, Finance and Economic Developmen­t.

“Zimra garnished CIWE accounts on June 13 2022, for the fourth time in 2022. The revenue authority is citing tax compliance issues and is demanding Vat (value-added tax) payment soon after submission of an IPC (interim payment certificat­e) to the employer,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe