2 years ago
Minority Leader in Parliament, Haruna Idrissu, and two NDC MPs are asking the Supreme Court to control the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) from its arranged execution of the Electronic Transactions Levy on May 1.
Along with Mahama Ayariga and Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, the MPs have sued the Attorney-General contending that Parliament didn't have the necessary number of at minimum portion of its individuals present when the disputable duty strategy was supported.
Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu, 2 others sue AG over E-Levy endorsement
Before the still up in the air by the Supreme Court the lawmakers need this between time measure set up.
"That since the established legitimacy of the entry of the Electronic Transfer Levy Act, 2022(Act 1075) is the gravamen of our case under the watchful eye of the Honorable Court, it is legitimate, just, and evenhanded that the Government of Ghana through the GRA or its officials and specialists are limited from starting with the execution of the Levy until the assurance of the considerable suit under the watchful eye of the Honorable Court", records documented for the three lawmakers say.
Private legitimate expert, Godwin Tameklo who recorded the reports for the MPs, says an inability to control the GRA would cause what is happening of conceivable unsalvageable mischief to citizens.
"That except if the Ghana Revenue Authority is limited, unsalvageable damage would be occasioned to the Plaintiffs and furthermore to a large number of residents of Ghana and any remaining people in Ghana on the premise that assuming the Court invalidates the section of the Electronic Transfer Levy Act, 2022(Act 1075), the public authority wouldn't be in the situation to repay all the monies paid in huge numbers of residents of Ghana and any remaining people.
This will prompt the lamentable circumstance of government unreasonably improving itself in view of wrongdoing to the detriment of the residents of Ghana and any remaining people in Ghana."
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