COURT HEARS HOW FICTITIOUS COMPANIES AID TRADERS IN TAX EVASION.

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BY NT CORRESPONDENT.

An investigating officer in a case in which directors of Mahesh and Tirth Constitution Company ltd are charged with over Sh30 million tax fraud has told the court that the company had claimed tax from two fictitious companies.

Chief Inspector George Otieno, the investigating officer from Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) said that the two companies were flagged as fictitious because they were registered only on paper.

He said the Registrar of Companies said Darwine wholesalers and Fahari wholesalers were not trading nor did they have physical addresses for trading.

Otieno further told the court that it was a scheme to assist genuine traders by issuing fictitious invoices to help them reduce taxes payable to KRA.

Mahesh Kumar Batukraijani and Valani Keshra Karsani and their company- Mahesh and Tirth construction company limited are accused of tax evasion.

It is alleged that on diverse dates between February 20, 2016 and September 20, 2017 jointly being directors of the company, they unlawfully made incorrect statements in the value added tax return for the period, thereby reducing the company’s VAT liability by Sh17,483,602.

The prosecution told the court the two directors also jointly made incorrect statements in the value added tax return for the period March 6, 2016 to January 1, 2017 thereby reducing the tax liability by Sh7,055,595.

The fraud case will be mentioned in two weeks’ time.

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