City
Epaper

Amid financial crisis, SL passes a bill to legalise undisclosed assets

By IANS | Updated: September 7, 2021 21:50 IST

Colombo, Sep 7 The Sri Lanka Parliament on Tuesday passed a Finance Bill which allows legalising undisclosed assets....

Open in App

Colombo, Sep 7 The Sri Lanka Parliament on Tuesday passed a Finance Bill which allows legalising undisclosed assets.

The Finance Bill, which was passed with 144 votes in favour and 44 against it, was moved to enable persons to voluntarily disclose undisclosed taxable supplies, incomes and assets required to be disclosed under certain laws and to provide for the imposition of a tax on the taxable supplies, incomes and assets so disclosed.

The bill provides opportunities to invest amounts equivalent to the undisclosed tax value, in shares issued by companies, treasury bills issued by the Central Bank, credit securities issued by a company and movable or immovable properties.

However, the opposition had complained that the bill would pave way for money laundering and legalise black money.

A number of opposition parties had gone to the Supreme Court challenging the bill. They argued that the bill is an invitation for the money launderers to seek protection under it.

The opposition had also argued that the bill would surpass the existing laws like the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, Suppression of Terrorist Financing Act, Bribery Act and Illicit Traffic of Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, which are also vital legal safeguards against related offences.

The Supreme Court had sent the guidelines to the parliament that needed to be followed to pass the bill.

Faced with the worst economic crisis, Sri Lanka is going through a number of financial challenges including shortage of foreign reserves to pay for essential food imports, mounting foreign debts and local currency depreciating against the US dollar in record law.

One of the main foreign currency earners, tourism, which accounted for over 10 per cent of GDP in 2019, has been suffering since the 2019 Easter Sunday attacks and the Covid-19 pandemic. The country is desperate to attract investors, both local and foreign.

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: colomboCentral BankSupreme CourtSri LankaDemocraticDemocratic socialist republic
Open in App

Related Stories

CricketBAN-W vs PAK-W LIVE Cricket Streaming: When and Where to Watch Bangladesh vs Pakistan ICC Women's ODI World Cup 2025 Match 3 In India

BusinessVodafone Idea Share Price Falls as Supreme Court Postpones AGR Dues Hearing to Oct 6

BusinessVodafone Idea Share Price Falls By 6% Ahead of Supreme Court Hearing On Rs, 9450 Crore AGR Dues

NationalDelhi Metro Tragedy: Woman Falls or Jumps From Supreme Court Station; Investigation Underway

BusinessVodafone Idea Shares Rise by 1%: Telecom Stock Jumps 15% in One Month After Government Signals Support on AGR Dues

Politics Realted Stories

MumbaiAmeet Satam Appointed As Mumbai BJP President Ahead of BMC Polls

Maharashtra'Chaddi Baniyan' Protest at Maharashtra Assembly: Opposition Stages Agitation Against Sena MLA for Punching and Slapping Canteen Staff (Watch Video)

MaharashtraMaharashtra Monsoon Session: Ajit Pawar Slams Bhaskar Jadhav Over Fund Allegations, Says 'No Need for Unsolicited Advice'

MumbaiUddhav Thackeray Pats Raj Thackeray on Back at Victory Rally Speech; Emotional Video of Thackeray Brothers Goes Viral

MaharashtraMarathi Language Controversy: ‘Did I Pass a GR Against Brotherhood?’ Devendra Fadnavis Hits Back at Uddhav & Raj Thackeray