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Tuesday, 10 May 2011 21:16 |
From Thupeyo Muleya in BEITBRIDGE THERE is congestion at Beitbridge Border Post following a sudden influx of used vehicle imports, mainly from Japan, as car dealers and individuals rush to beat the June 30 deadline set by Government to ban the importation of vehicles over five- years-old. Sources at the border post say 15 car carriers used to be handled per day, translating to 101 vehicles. The number has since increased in the last two months to between 30 and 40 car carriers per day, translating to about 250 cars per day. He said Government wanted to hold further consultations with relevant stakeholders. In an interview yesterday, the minister said he would soon issue a statement over that matter. The regulations were set in September last year and were due to become effective in Dece-mber. It is understood that car imports which pass through Beitbridge have increased in the last two months with Zimbabwe Revenue Authority officials reportedly struggling to clear the backlog at the vehicles duty calculations section. Unconfirmed reports also indicate that car dealers here and in Durban were also contemplating reducing prices to clear their stocks before midnight on June 30. Car importers have raised concern over the pace at which excise duty for their vehicles was being calculated. Early this year, it was reported that the num-ber of cars coming in through Beitbridge rose in January this year to 3 150 compared to 2 310 in January 2010. "A total of 3 150 vehicle submissions were ma-de for the month of January 2011 compared to 2 310 vehicles imported in January 2010," said an official who declined to be named. They claimed that they expected the number to increase. "That has also put a lot of pressure on the vehicle clearance department as we have to battle with the duty calculations. "In most cases, our peak periods for arrival of car carriers are Thursdays and Fridays, where we clear 160 or more cars per day." It is feared that the number might drastically increase soon. Cars with an engine capacity of between 1 000 cubic cm and 1 500 cubic cm now attract excise duty of 25 percent, Value Added Tax of 15 percent and a surtax of 25 percent for vehicles that are more than five-years-old. In a recent interview Zimra's Commissioner responsible for corporate and legal affairs Ms Florence Jambwa said the rise in imports meant the Government was now making more money than it did from car import taxes. Mrs Jambwa said Zimra faced the challenge of cars piling up at the vehicle workstation and they were in the process of moving all clearance processes to the Manica Bonded Warehouse. This was because some importers dumped their cars there after failing to pay duty. |
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