By JULIUS BARIGABA
Even as recent trade wars in the East African Community have mostly featured Kenya and Uganda over sugar exports, Kampala has for the past two months been locked in a dispute with Tanzania over an 18 per cent value added tax on the latter’s rice. The East African has learnt that tens of thousands of tonnes of rice grown and produced in Tanzania are either lying at Mutukula and Port Bell or in other border towns on the Tanzanian side. Uganda says it is invoking its internal law as opposed to the EAC laws. Article 15 (1) and (2) of the EAC Customs Union Protocol prevents discrimination and imposition of internal tax on products of partner states.
The five EAC partner states have not yet harmonised domestic tax laws and as such, Uganda’s VAT Act applies in this case, according to Moses Egwapu, a tax policy officer at the Ministry of Finance. “Why should rice from Tanzania not pay VAT? The VAT Act states that rice from outside Uganda attracts VAT… VAT is a domestic tax,” Mr Egwapu told The East African. Mr Egwapu added that the VAT Act applies to all rice imports so as to protect the local industry and give incentive to Ugandan millers to add value to their rice. This, however, plays into the same nationalistic and protectionist motives that Kenya was using to block Ugandan sugar millers from exporting their excess sugar to Kenya to which Kampala responded by blocking beef imports from Kenya, until Presidents Yoweri Museveni and Uhuru Kenyatta agreed to end the long running trade war.
But the rice lobby in Uganda, which boasts 120 dealers who buy both locally as well as import from the EAC and elsewhere, is citing the EAC Customs Union Protocol and the EAC Customs Management Act as it heads to the courts to interpret the laws and arbitrate in this dispute. “We are waiting for them to write to us formally about their stand and we shall then take them head on. “We are going to fight this legally and morally. If this is not solved in the next few days, we will campaign the Protocol, highlighting the discrimination against rice in favour of sugar,” said IssaSekitto, spokesman of the Kampala City Traders Association, the business lobby to which the rice importers belong. But other players in Uganda’s rice sub-sector have a different take: That with the country about to go into elections, the imposition of this tax could be political.
Political angle
“Rice farmers in Uganda have become politically alert. They know when to push for protection from imports. This is election time in Uganda. What do you think will happen if the government allows imports to flood the market? It has political consequences,” said Phillip Idro, a rice farmer and miller, and former Ugandan ambassador to China.