Scores of protesting workers of the Nigeria Postal
Service (NIPOST) on Thursday stormed the headquarters of the Federal Ministry of
Finance,
Budget and National Planning in Abuja demanding the
abolition of the plan to cede the collection of stamp duty to the Federal
Inland Revenue
Service (FIRS).
The workers, who barricaded the ministry's main gate
at the Central
Area of Abuja, staged their protest while the
breakdown of the 2020 budget was going at the Main Auditorium of the ministry.
Led by Ayo Olorunfemi under the aegis of the Senior Staff
Association of Statutory Corporations of Government Owned
Companies, the protesting workers, who were armed
with placards bearing various inscriptions, demanded to have audience with the
Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Mrs. Zainab Ahmed.
Some participants, including top government officials
who had attended the public presentation/breakdown of the 2020 budget, could not
leave the premises of the ministry as the protesters insisted that they wanted
the minister to address their concerns.
According to them, the current amendment of the
Stamp Duty Act by the
National Assembly was done to allow the FIRS to
collect stamp duty on electronic transactions, adding that the standard global
practice puts such responsibility on agencies like NIPOST.
The minister, who promptly responded to the workers’
insistence to address them in company of the Minister of Information and
Culture,
Lai Mohammed, asked their leader to express their
grievances.
Olorunfemi, who spoke on behalf of others, said
their demand was for the minister to take their protest to the federal
government so that the collection of stamp duty will remain the duty of NIPOST,
adding that the workers had already projected N500 billion revenue for the
government from that source.
Responding, the minister asked the workers to
document their claims and forward them to her, adding that the concern of the
government was revenue generation.
She noted that the government was targeting N400
billion from stamp duty in 2020.
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