Technoglitch
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India said it may seize Vodafone Group Plc’s assets in the country if the company doesn’t pay a disputedRs.14,200 crore tax bill that’s still undergoing international arbitration proceedings, according to a copy of the notice that was sent to the company this month.
Anil Sant, deputy commissioner of income tax, informed the company’s Vodafone International Holdings BV Dutch unit of its dues in a letter dated 4 February, according to the document, a copy of which was seen by Bloomberg News. Spokesman Ben Padovan at Vodafone and a representative at India’s tax department declined to comment.
Any overdue amounts, even from overseas companies, may be recovered “from any assets of the non-resident which are, or may at any time come, within India,” according to the letter.
The dispute traces back to Vodafone’s $11 billion acquisition of a 67% in the mobile-phone business owned by Hutchison Whampoa, now part of CK Hutchison Holdings Ltd. While Vodafone has said it doesn’t owe the Indian government money because the transaction was conducted offshore, Indian authorities have sought to collect taxes on the deal because it involved the assets in the country.
Vodafone, the second-largest mobile carrier in India, began international arbitration proceedings on the tax bill in 2014. It’s the biggest of three disputes Vodafone has had with India’s government under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s predecessor.
The other disputes involved the valuation of international transactions—a case that Vodafone won at the Bombay high court—and a separate ruling in October, whereby the court ruled that Vodafone didn’t owe as much as Rs.8,500 crore in back taxes
India asks Vodafone to pay taxes or face asset seizures - Livemint
Anil Sant, deputy commissioner of income tax, informed the company’s Vodafone International Holdings BV Dutch unit of its dues in a letter dated 4 February, according to the document, a copy of which was seen by Bloomberg News. Spokesman Ben Padovan at Vodafone and a representative at India’s tax department declined to comment.
Any overdue amounts, even from overseas companies, may be recovered “from any assets of the non-resident which are, or may at any time come, within India,” according to the letter.
The dispute traces back to Vodafone’s $11 billion acquisition of a 67% in the mobile-phone business owned by Hutchison Whampoa, now part of CK Hutchison Holdings Ltd. While Vodafone has said it doesn’t owe the Indian government money because the transaction was conducted offshore, Indian authorities have sought to collect taxes on the deal because it involved the assets in the country.
Vodafone, the second-largest mobile carrier in India, began international arbitration proceedings on the tax bill in 2014. It’s the biggest of three disputes Vodafone has had with India’s government under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s predecessor.
The other disputes involved the valuation of international transactions—a case that Vodafone won at the Bombay high court—and a separate ruling in October, whereby the court ruled that Vodafone didn’t owe as much as Rs.8,500 crore in back taxes
India asks Vodafone to pay taxes or face asset seizures - Livemint