Revenue Authorities in the EAC should therefore be on the lookout for such traders who are abusing the free movement of goods in the region. Free movement of goods is one of the objectives of the EAC Common Market Protocol whose implementation started a year ago.
This information came to light during a tour organized by the EAC secretariat for journalists based in Arusha, Tanzania to visit border posts to assess the implementation process of the Common Market protocol.
"One of the challenges is that traders declare goods imported from outside the region at ports of entry in Mombasa and Dar es Salaam as goods in transit to a partner states and when they reach the declared destination they are repacked and re-exported to another EAC country," said the Kenya Revenue Authority, Taveta station manager Christopher Mutaba.
"Although taxes are paid at the ports of entry these goods are repacked and re-exported yet they are not supposed to enjoy the tax holiday offered under the Common Market protocol" he explained.
He said such goods are supposed to pay import duty of 25%, excise duty of 10% and value added tax of 18%.
He identified the other problem as conflict on who should issue certificates of origin in both Kenya and Tanzania.
"Certificates in Tanzania are issued by the Tanzania Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture (TCCIA) while in Kenya they are issued by the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA)," he said.
“We can only trust certificates of origin when they are issued by a Customs officer who we are in contact with rather than the chamber of commerce."
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