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Illicit artificial toddy trade deprives govt. of Rs. 80 billion in revenue annually
State Minister promises remedial action
By Saman Indrajith
One of the topics that kept reverberating throughout the budget debate that ended in parliament last Wednesday was the drain of excise revenue as a result of loopholes in the tax net by artificial toddy manufacturing businessmen.
Various facets of the issue were raised by SJB Matara District MP Buddhika Pathirana during the question time on three separate days highlighting the severity of the damage inflicted on the national economy by tax evading toddy businessmen who deprive the government coffers of a whopping Rs. 80 billion annually.
Following the disclosure by MP Pathriana, State Minister of Money & Capital Market and State Enterprise Reforms Ajith Nivard Cabraal promised remedial action.
Commissioner-General of Excise, Ariyadasa Bodaragama, acknowledged that there exists a tax leakage but he was wary of the figure of Rs. 80 billion.
Bodaragama is due to retire at the end of the month. Deputy Commissioner-General of the Inland Revenue Department, M. J. Gunasiri has been named as his successor.
Challenges before Gunasiri, as the new Excise Commissioner-General, are enormous, and whether he would be able to help Minister Cabraal deliver on his promise remains to be seen.
As Gunasiri earlier served as Deputy Commissioner-General Tax Administration (Corporate Small Entities & Non Corporate Sector) at the Inland Revenue Department, his expertise may be useful to remedy the situation. However, he has only three more months of service before his retirement. Unless he is given a service extension, the task of finding solutions to the tax evasion issue raised by Pathirana will probably have to wait till another Commissioner-General is appointed.
Pathirana told The Sunday Island that the government coffer is bound to lose over Rs. 80 billion a year due to tax evasion by artificial toddy manufacturers and the ramifications to the national economy are more acute if the health cost is also taken into account.
“We have seen many instances of serious health problems that illicit brewers caused to the people. Artificial toddy is produced by mixing urea, ammonia, nickel cadmium of old batteries and sugar. This harmful brew is sold at liquor shops and used for manufacturing ‘coconut arrack’ and vinegar.
“Suppose we overlook tipplers who consume the toxic brew knowingly or unknowingly, what about innocent consumers who buy vinegar? In Sri Lankan food culture, vinegar is an integral part. Imagine the number of people who get ill because they consume vinegar made of artificial toddy,” the MP said.
“The artificial toddy industry is well-rooted in coastal areas in the south. If one checks the number of trees tapped and the number of liters of toddy being sold, it is a very simple calculation to understand how much artificial toddy is being consumed. Only around one and a half litres of toddy could be tapped from a single coconut palm. As per reports of coconut researchers, the amount could vary slightly due to factors such as climate, humidity and season. The amount being sold by license holders varies from the actual amount extracted from palms. A difference is in the region of 60,000-70,000 litres. So, it is obvious that toddy comes from other sources”, he noted.
There have been raids by police and STF but toddy businessmen continue to ply their trade because the police cannot take the culprits before courts as per Sections 49, 50 and 52 of the Excise Ordinance. They have to hand over the suspects and the equipment to excise officers, who most of the time do not produce the suspects in courts but release them after filing a Technical Crime Report (TCR), the parliamentarian further said.
“Under the TCR, the racketeers only have to pay a small sum by way of a composition fee. The TCR is actually one of the loopholes these businessmen get out so easily. I pointed out all these to the government. I hope Minister Cabraal will act as promised. I also pointed out to him that there are not only excise officers but some finance ministry officials who benefit from the artificial toddy business. I hope and pray that the minister will be able to remedy this situation,” Pathirana added.
President of the Nawa Sinhala Rawaya, Ven Magalkande Sudattha Thera said the illicit toddy industry is thriving despite isolated raids. The police and the STF conducted successful raids in many areas in the recent past. Thereafter, the police hand over the suspects and equipment to the Excise Department for legal action. Excise Department officials file a TCR and release them on a composition fee.
Many illicit toddy producers have licences for toddy tapping. So finding sugar, ammonia, yeast, batteries in toddy amounts to only a technical error; it becomes a technical crime if they suspect that the manufacturer had purposefully mixed them with toddy or produced toddy using them as ingredients. During a recent raid, the police found three bags containing 25 kilos of ammonia to be used to produce toddy. How could the government ensure public safety when poison is being sold in bottles in the name of toddy, the prelate asked.
President of the consumer watchdog National Movement for Consumer Rights Protection, Ranjith Withanage said that old mobile phone batteries were also being used in the fermentation process of artificial toddy.
He said a countrywide survey conducted by his organisation revealed that discarded mobile phone batteries and power banks and chemicals such as urea were used to produce artificial toddy.
“We have information that such toddy is being sold to produce coconut arrack and vinegar. Arrack and vinegar made from artificial toddy were sold in the market while those responsible for preventing consumers from such harmful products have done nothing so far to raid shops and places that sold them”, he asserted.
Withanage said that local arrack and vinegar made from artificial toddy have been identified as one of the main causes of chronic kidney diseases.
He further said the government loses over Rs 180 billion a year due to the illicit liquor and tobacco (Rs. 100 billion on illicit liquor and tobacco and Rs. 80 billion on illicit toddy).
“We expected the government to present budget proposals to counter the loss of revenue, but there was none”, he added.
Excise Department spokesman, Deputy Commissioner, Kapila Kumarasinghe said there were instances where toddy manufacturers were caught for using illegal methods to increase the volume of alcohol. Water, sugar, urea, yeast and salt are being used to get a high content of ammonia in toddy.
He said that toddy is being sold in taverns as fresh toddy and bottled toddy after pasteurizing so that they could be kept for one to two weeks. Toddy is also being sold for the production of vinegar. If toddy with additives are used to distill arrack, the machines extract only the alcohol and the additives are discarded as ‘spent-wash’. The distilling machines are calibrated only to extract alcohol, and not other elements in the raw materials.
In the most popular brands of arrack sold in the market, there is only three percent toddy and 97 percent water, ethanol and rectified spirits. Adding alien items during production is illegal,” he warned, adding that the Excise Department with its available resources is fighting hard not only against the artificial toddy industry but also other narcotics and drugs, he said.
Excise Commissioner General Bodaragama acknowledged there was a significant loss of excise revenue due to various tactics used by toddy manufacturers.
He said that there is a leakage of tax revenue but assured that he was certain that it could not be Rs. 80 billion.
State Minister of Money & Capital Market and State Enterprise Reforms Ajith Nivard Cabraal told The Sunday Island that Pathirana had raised this issue several times in Parliament and he had already instructed Secretary to the Ministry of Finance and the Excise Department officers to submit a comprehensive report to him on the matter.
The toddy industry extends from Kalutara, Gampaha, Puttalam, Badulla, Moneragala, Hambantota, Anuradhapura to the Northern and Eastern provinces. As at Dec. 31, 2019, there were 3,094 licensed toddy tappers and 32 licensed toddy producers in the country.
“There could be many more engaged in supportive services for their livelihood but we have no exact details on them”, he noted.
“Pathirana made constructive suggestions and we took note of them. We are thankful to his efforts and are determined to remedy the situation. I intend to study this matter first with my officials. I assure you that this would be studied properly and necessary action initiated”, the Minister assured.
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AG not bound by its recommendations, yet to receive report
PCoI on Easter Sunday attacks:
By Shamindra Ferdinando
Attorney General Dappula de Livera, PC is not bound by recommendations made by the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (P CoI) into the 2019 Easter Sunday carnage, or presidential directives in that regard, according to authoritative sources.
They said that the AG couldn’t under any circumstances initiate legal proceedings until he had received the full PCoI report.
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa received the PCoI report on Feb 1. The President’s Office delivered a set of PCoI reports to Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena on Feb 23, a day after the report was presented to the cabinet of ministers. The Island raised the matter with relevant authorities in the wake of a section of the media reporting the PCoI recommending punitive measures against former President Maithripala Sirisena, Defence Secretary Hemasiri Fernando, IGP Pujitha Jayasundera, Chief of State Intelligence Senior DIG Nilantha Jayawardena, Chief of National Intelligence retired DIG Sisira Mendis and All Ceylon Makkal Congress (ACMC) leader and Samagi Jana Balavegaya MP Rishad Bathiudeen et al over the Easter Sunday carnage.
Sources pointed out that due to the inordinate delay in sharing the PCoI report with the AG, the department hadn’t been able to take preliminary measures required to initiate the proceedings. Sources said that a team of officers would take at least six weeks or more to examine the report before tangible measures could be taken.
With the AG scheduled to retire on May 24, 2021, even if the AG Department received the P CoI it would be quite a tough task to initiate proceedings ahead of retirement, sources said. However, in terms of the 20th Amendment to the Constitution enacted in last October, both the AG and the IGP could receive extensions beyond 60 at the President’s discretion.
Dappula de Livera received an Acting appointment as the AG a week after the Easter Sunday carnage whereas his predecessor Jayantha Jayasuriya, PC, was elevated to Chief Justice.
Responding to another query, sources said that the Attorney General two weeks ago requested Secretary to the President for a copy of the P CoI. However, the AG was yet to receive one, sources said. In spite of the AG not receiving a P CoI copy, the AG had instructed the IGP to obtain a copy of the report when he requested the police to complete investigations into the Easter Sunday carnage. The AG issued specific instructions after having examined police files pertaining to the investigations.
The IGP, too, hadn’t received a copy so far though some sections of the report were in the public domain.
Agriculture Minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage displayed at a live political programme on Derana a copy of the P CoI report he received at the cabinet meeting earlier in the day.
Sources said that the Attorney General’s Department couldn’t decide on a course of action in respect of the Easter carnage on the basis of a section of the report. In terms of the Commission of Inquiry Act (Section 24), the AG enjoyed significant powers/authority in respect of investigations; sources said adding that the Department urgently required both the P CoI report and police investigations report. The Attorney General’s Department has raised the delay in receiving a P CoI report amidst the Catholic Church attacking the government over the same issue.
Sources said that ministerial committee appointed to study the P CoI report couldn’t decide on how to proceed with the recommendations and the matter was entirely in the hands of the AG. Sources pointed out that the delay on the part of the government to release the report had received the attention of sections of the international media, including the New York Times. Public Security Minister retired Rear Admiral Sarath Weerasekera having met Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith at the Bishop’s House on Dec 8, 2020 said that the AG would get a copy of the P CoI report once the President received it. Minister Weerasekera said that the CID had handed over the relevant files after having completed investigations into eight blasts. Referring to the Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) report on the Easter Sunday carnage, the former Navy Chief of Staff said that all such documents would have to be brought to one place and considered before initiating legal proceedings. Acknowledging that there could be delays, lawmaker Weerasekera said that on the instructions of the Attorney General a 12-member team of lawyers was working on the case. The minister vowed to expose the mastermind behind the Easter Sunday attacks. Investigations continued while some of those wanted were overseas, the minister said.
The minister acknowledged that the Attorney General couldn’t proceed without the P CoI report. Minister Weerasekera reiterated that once the President received the P CoI report, it would be sent to the Attorney General. The minister said that there were documents two to three feet high that needed scrutiny. The minister assured comprehensive investigation. The minister said that investigations pertaining to eight blasts had been completed and the reports handed over to the AG. However, the Attorney General had found shortcomings in those investigations.
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JVP picks holes in PCoI report
By Saman Indrajith
The Presidential Commission of Inquiry on the Easter Sunday bombings had failed to identify the mastermind of , the JVP said yesterday.
Addressing the media at the party headquarters in Pelawatte, JVP Propaganda Secretary MP Vijitha Herath said that the PCoI report had levelled accusations against former President Maithripala Sirisena, former IGP and head of intelligence for their dereliction of duty, shirking of responsibilities and not taking action to prevent the attacks and negligence. There were reference to the causes of the terror attacks and actions to be taken to avoid such attacks and the influence of extremist organisations. “However, there is no mention of the mastermind of the attacks, the handlers of the attackers and those whose interests the carnage served. It is also not mentioned whether there has been any foreign or local organisation behind those attacks. As per the PCoI report the attack took place as a result of culmination of extremism.
“According to the PCoI the extremist activities were a result of the prevailing political situation then. The entire nation was waiting to see who was responsible and who masterminded those attacks. The PCoI has failed to identify the true culprits responsible for the terror attacks. The report says that the leader of the suicide cadres killed himself in the attacks and it was a puzzle. That means those who are actually responsible for the attacks are still at large. The report does not provide exact details of the sources of the attacks. The PCoI had sittings for one year and five months. It summoned various persons and got their statements but it has failed to shed any light on the terror attacks. Everybody knows that the top leaders of the government and heads of security and intelligence establishments failed in their duties. Ranil Wickremesinghe was the second in command and he too is bound by the responsibility but the PCoI report fails to identify him as one of the persons against whom legal action should be instituted. The PCoI has treated Wickremesinghe and former President Maithripala Sirisena differently. We are not telling that this report is a total failure but we cannot accept this as a complete report. The PCoI handed over its report to the President on Feb 1. After 23 days it was sent to Parliament. Now, a copy of the report is there in the parliamentary library for the perusal of MPs.”
Herath said that the PCoI did not have powers to take punitive action. “It only has powers to name those responsible and recommend action to be taken against those named.