News about the levy on bread sparked complaints, followed by a statement from the state Commissioner for Information and Communications, Kingsley Fanwo, who explained that the new levy was imposed in order to protect local bakers from those “who bring bread to the state without paying any form of levy”.
READ ALSO: Kogi Commissioner Explains Why The State Government Imposed Levy On Every Loaf Of Bread Sold
Kogi state Deputy Governor, Edward Onoja, also said that himself and the state governor, Yahaya Ballo, were not informed about the new tax on loaves of bread in the state.
Onoja in a statement released on Saturday, November 14, expressed that:
I am directed by His Excellency to give the lie to news of an alleged tax imposed on each loaf of bread to be sold in Kogi State. There is no iota of truth in the claims that we have approved such wickedness, because we have not and cannot.Onoja noted that he was shocked when news of the strange measure made rounds on media platforms. He said it ran contrary to the widely advertised posture of the state government that the people of Kogi State must not be subjected to any act or policy that will increase their pains during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Neither the Governor nor the state executive council has imagined or proposed such a devilish tax regime, how much less imposing same on any food or essential commodity, not to mention bread which is a table staple and the basic lifeline of many a household.
He also said:
It is well-documented in the media that Governor Yahaya Bello has fought powerful forces, more than any other governor perhaps, to keep his people safe. As CoviD-19 ravaged the country and the world he has mobilised them for lifestyle changes that defeated the virus in the state. He spared them lockdowns and the inherent disruptions to their lives and livelihoods characteristic of covid responses in other places. He scrupulously obeyed WHO and NCDC guidelines to provide testing to high risk individuals. He relied on pioneering use of Rapid Test Kits for the coronavirus long before they became mainstream. He responded swiftly with contact tracing and quarantines on all suspected cases.He urged Nigerians to disregard the alleged bread tax as not only improbable but impossible in Kogi State under the current administration.
Any business which has met the regulatory requirements for doing business in Kogi State including payment of routine tax is entitled to operate freely, and that includes bakeries and bread traders.
Deal decisively with any person who tries to extort the public now the same way it dealt with those who tried to collect money from places of worship and residences for an alleged official fumigation exercise early in the COVID19 cycle.
Post a Comment