City
Epaper

Uganda scraps controversial social media tax

By ANI | Updated: June 10, 2021 22:40 IST

Uganda on Thursday scrapped the controversial social media tax in the 2021/2022 financial year budget.

Open in App

Uganda on Thursday scrapped the controversial social media tax in the 2021/2022 financial year budget.

Amos Lugoloobi, designate minister of state for finance in charge of planning, while reading the country's fiscal budget, repealed the 200 shillings (0.05 U.S. dollars) excise duty imposed on the use of social media.

Lugoloobi said the government has instead introduced a direct tax of 12 per cent on airtime and mobile internet data in the East African country.

"I rationalize the excise duty regime on telecommunication services by scrapping the excise duty on Over-The-Top (OTT) and introduce a harmonized excise duty rate of 12 per cent on airtime, value-added services and internet data excluding data for the provision of medical services and the provision of education services," said Lugoloobi.

The move comes after protests and some members of the public resorting to using Virtual Private Networks and wireless networks in their offices to avoid paying the tax introduced on July 1, 2018.

Activists described the tax as being unfair and limiting people's individual freedom to express themselves and communicate freely.

The government then said it imposed the tax to increase domestic budget financing instead of depending on foreign aid which is becoming expensive. (ANI/Xinhua)

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Amos lugoloobi
Open in App

International Realted Stories

InternationalGlobal Peace Prayer Festival 2025 begins in Thimphu with PM Tshering Tobgay in attendance

InternationalNew narco hub: ISI and Dawood gang move drug ops to Bangladesh to evade global scrutiny

InternationalBangladesh JeI chief issues "apology" for party's "past mistakes" ahead of elections in February

InternationalSindhi leader writes to US lawmaker, alleges political repression, torture in Pakistan

InternationalSix months after alleged attack in UK, Sikh man accuses police of inaction