Tag: Acacia

Tanzania vs African Barrick Gold PLC, August 2020, Court of Appeal, Case No. 144 of 2018, [2020] TZCA 1754

AFRICAN BARRICK GOLD PLC (now Acacia Mining Plc), the largest mining company operating in Tanzania, was issued a tax bill for unpaid taxes, interest and penalties for alleged under-declared export revenues. As a tax resident in Tanzania, AFRICAN BARRICK GOLD was asked to remit withholding taxes on dividend payments amounting to USD 81,843,127 which the company allegedly made for the years 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013 (this sum was subsequently reduced to USD 41,250,426). AFRICAN BARRICK GOLD was also required to remit withholding taxes on payments which the mining entities in Tanzania had paid to the parent, together with payments which was made to other non-resident persons (its shareholders) for the service rendered between 2010 up to September 2013. AFRICAN BARRICK GOLD argued that, being a holding company incorporated in the United Kingdom, it was neither a resident company in Tanzania, nor did it conduct any business in Tanzania to attract the income tax demanded according to the tax assessment issued by the tax authorities. In 2016, the Tax Revenue Appeals Tribunal upheld the assessment issued by the tax authorities. AFRICAN BARRICK GOLD then filed an appeal to the Court of Appeal. Judgement of the Court of Appeal The Court dismissed the appeal of AFRICAN BARRICK GOLD and upheld the assessment issued by the tax authorities. Excerpts “In light of our earlier finding that the appellant is a resident company with sources of mining income from its mining entities in Tanzania, this ground need not detain us long. We shall dismiss this ground because assignment of TIN and VRN registration numbers are legal consequences of the appellant’s tax residence in Tanzania. From the premise of our conclusion that the appellant became a resident company from 11th March 2010 when it was issued with a Certificate of Compliance for purposes of registering its place of business in Tanzania, the appellant had statutory obligation to apply to the respondent for a tax identification number within 15 days of beginning to carry on the business.” “We shall not trouble ourselves with the way the Board and the Tribunal interchangeably discussed “tax avoidance” and “tax evasion” while these courts were determining the salient question as to whether the dividend the appellant received from its Tanzanian entities and which was paid out to the appellant’s shareholders abroad was subject to withholding tax. As we pointed earlier, neither the Board nor the Tribunal made any actionable criminal finding against the appellant in respect of tax evasion. Otherwise, we agree with Mr. Tito in his submission that since the dividend which the appellant paid to its foreign shareholders had a source in the United Republic in terms of section 69(a) of the ITA 2004, the appellant had a statutory duty under section 54(1)(a) of the ITA 2004 to withhold tax from such dividends. Because the appellant failed to withhold that tax, the appellant is liable to pay that withholding tax in terms of sections 82(l)(a)(b) and 84(3) of the ITA 2004.” Click here for translation ocr-civil-appeal-no-144-2018-african-barrick-gold-plcappellant-versus-commissioner-general-tra-respo ...

Tanzania vs. Acacia Mining Plc, July 2017, $150 billion tax bill

The London-based gold mining firm, Acacia Mining Plc, the largest mining company operating in Tanzania, was in July 2017 issued a $190 billion tax bill. The bill is split into $40 billion in unpaid taxes and an additional $150 billion in interest and penalties. The case is based on the findings of government-appointed committees. Following the release of a government-ordered audit of the mining industry, Acacia Mining was  accused of operating illegally in the country and tax evasion. The charge covers alleged under-declared export revenues from the Bulyanhulu and Buzwagi mines over periods between 2000 and 2017. For its part, Acacia, while refuting the government’s findings, “re-iterates that it has fully declared all revenues†...

Tanzania vs. AFRICAN BARRICK GOLD PLC, March 2016, Tax Revenue Appeals Tribunal, Case No. 16 of 2015

AFRICAN BARRICK GOLD PLC (now Acacia Mining Plc), the largest mining company operating in Tanzania, was issued a tax bill for unpaid taxes, interest and penalties for alleged under-declared export revenues from the Bulyanhulu and Buzwagi mines. Acacia Mining was accused of operating illegally in the country and for tax evasion. Decision of the Tax Revenue Appeals Tribunal The Tribunal decided in favour of the tax authorities. “The conclusion that can be drawn from the above definitions is that the explanation offered by ABG as the source of dividends, i.e., distributable reserves and IPO proceeds are far from being plausible. In the circumstances, it is fair to conclude that the respondent’s argument that the transactions were simply a design created by the appellant aimed at tax evasion was justified. One also wonders as to how could part of IPO proceeds, a one-off event, even if those proceeds were distributable as dividends (which in law they are not), could explain the payment of four-years, back-to-back dividends to the appellant’s shareholders. Since ABG’s only entities that carry on business anywhere in the world are the three Tanzanian gold-mining companies, ABG’s only source of revenue that could create net profits or retained earnings would be the three Tanzanian companies (or one or more of them). While none of them was allegedly making any profits, and since the appellant has no other subsidiary anywhere in the world engaged in business, one is compelled to further conclude that at least one, if not more or all, of the appellant’s three gold producing subsidiaries in Tanzania was making profit. We see no other plausible explanation. Ultimately, the fact that none of ABG’s subsidiaries is declaring any profit that could provide its holding company with such huge net profits sufficient to distribute to its shareholders four years in a row is what in our respectful opinion constitutes the evidence of a sophisticated scheme of tax evasion. To borrow the words of Lord Browne-Wilkinson, this Tribunal cannot accept to be relegated to a mere spectator, mesmerized by the moves of the appellant’s game, oblivious of the end result. The circumstances remind one of the wise words of Justice Benjamin Cardozo in Re Rouss, 116 N.E. 782 at 785, who stated: “Consequences cannot alter statutes but may help to fix their meaning.” We are thus of the respectful view that the Board was entitled to go beyond the mere plain meaning of the provisions of section 66 (4) (a) of the Income Tax Act. The circumstances fully justified the application of the purposive approach rule in construction of tax statutes, as promulgated by Lord Wilberforce in W. T. Ramsay and more elaborately explained by Lord Browne-Wilkinson in McGuckian. Hence, by recognizing the scheme behind the facade that ultimately enabled it to uncover the true source of the dividends that ABG was able to pay to its shareholders for four consecutive years, the Board took the correct view of the law. With these findings we see no merit in the first and second grounds of appeal, and we would dismiss both of them. This conclusion would allow us to now determine the third ground of the appeal to the effect that the Commissioner General was justified in invoking his powers under section 133 (2) of the Income Tax Act , 2004 and section 19 (4) of the Value Added Tax Act to register the appellant under the two Acts and issue it with TIN and VRN Certificates. In the ultimate result, we find no merit in this appeal. We dismiss it with costs.” Click here for translation african barick ...