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Trustco CEO Gets N$5-Billion Private Acquisition Offer [Namibian] Trustco holdings chief executive Quinton van Rooyen has received a private offer to sell his shares and debt holdings to VeldBridge Holdings.

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Trustco Founding Family receives private offer from Veldbridge Holdings Trustco Group Holdings Ltd (“Trustco”) announced that the founding family shareholder of Trustco, and the Group Chief Executive Officer, Dr Quinton van Rooyen, have received a private acquisition offer from VeldBridge Holdings Ltd, a Cayman Islands-incorporated investment company. The offer encompasses Dr van Rooyen’s entire shareholding in Trustco. Additionally, VeldBridge

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Trustco Loses High Court Battle Against Namibia Revenue Agency Over Tax Dispute [Namibian] Trustco Group Holdings has lost a High Court battle against the Namibia Revenue Agency (Namra).

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Trustco loses High Court battle against Namibia Revenue Agency over tax dispute Trustco Group Holdings has lost a High Court battle against the Namibia Revenue Agency (Namra). In 2022 Namra froze bank accounts of 42 entities linked to Trustco due to more than N$200 million Trustco owed Namra. Trustco challenged this decision in court. In its application, Trustco requested the court to declare that sections of the Income Tax Act and the Value-Added Tax Act, which allow the tax authorities to declare an entity like a bank an agent for the collection of tax from funds held by it, are unconstitutional, and to refer those sections to the parliament to be rectified within a period of 12 months. However, the High Court dismissed Trustco’s application with costs last week. “The applicants’ challenge to declare 91 of the Income Tax Act 24 of 1981 and section 36 of the Value Added Act 10 of 2000 unconstitutional is dismissed,” reads part of the court judgement. The High Court also instructed Trustco to pay Namra’s legal costs. At the heart of the dispute, Trustco was reportedly owed approximately N$136 million in value added tax (VAT) credits by Namra. However, this position reversed during 2020/2021 when Namra raised assessments for various tax liabilities, including income tax, VAT, and withholding tax, amounting to hundreds of millions. According to an affidavit filed by Trustco Group Holdings’ executive financial director, Floors Abrahams, at the time, he said the decisions to demand that companies in the group should immediately pay their taxes and interest on their tax arrears were “administratively unfair, unreasonable, […] irrational, arbitrary” and also in violation of the Constitution. He also said Trustco is “gravely concerned” about the timing of the decisions, which were taken at a time when the Trustco group and its Trustco Bank were embroiled in a dispute with the Bank of Namibia. Namra informed Trustco in a letter on 3 October 2022 that the group owed N$201.7 million in unpaid taxes, and also N$103.8 million in interest on those taxes. At the time, Namra requested that companies in the Trustco group pay 30% of the capital amount owed to Namra by 10 October 2022. In a follow-up letter on 20 October 2022, Namra demanded that the Trustco companies settle their outstanding tax bills, including penalties and interest, immediately. Abrahams said Trustco is disputing Namra’s calculation of the taxes owed by companies in the group. According to Trustco, if Namra had correctly set off tax credits owed to the Trustco group, the group would owe Namra only about N$7.8 million. He further said, in line with its calculation of its tax arrears, Trustco paid an amount of nearly N$2.7 million – 30% of the taxes Trustco says it owes – to Namra on 11 October 2022. From March 2020 to October that year, Trustco had paid nearly N$63.4 million to Namra, Abrahams said. He also said Trustco had an agreement with Namra that the group’s outstanding tax liabilities had to be paid only by the end of May 2023, and that Namra made an about-turn on this agreement without giving Trustco an opportunity to be heard. “When Namra owed Trustco money, it did not repay Trustco, but was willing to set future taxes off against the refund that was due to Trustco,” Abrahams said. “But now, when the position has changed, it immediately wants to recover payment in full from Trustco.” Namra’s decisions “demonstrate a total disregard for the financial and economic impact of such a directive on the ongoing operations of the Trustco group of companies, and constitute irrational, arbitrary and malicious decision-making,” Abrahams claimed. The post Trustco loses High Court battle against Namibia Revenue Agency over tax dispute appeared first on The Namibian.

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Trustco loses High Court battle against Namibia Revenue Agency over tax dispute - The Namibian - Trustco loses High Court battle against Namibia Revenue Agency over tax dispute  The Namibian -

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Trustco’s N$593 million tax challenge against NamRA fails Allexer Namundjembo The High Court has ruled against Trustco Group Holdings, dismissing its application to challenge two decisions made by the Namibia Revenue Agency (NamRA) about its unpaid taxes. Trustco had argued that NamRA owed it N$136 million in VAT credits, which it wanted to use to reduce interest on its tax debt. Trustco claimed that NamRA owed it about N$136 million in VAT credits as of March 2020. Trustco further argued that these credits were related to VAT, withholding tax, and PAYE obligations, and that an agreement had been made to use the credits to reduce accrued interest on outstanding balances. Despite this, NamRA issued a demand in September 2022, requiring Trustco entities to settle their tax arrears for liabilities up to 31 December 2019 by 31 May 2023. Trustco challenged the demand in court, arguing that NamRA violated its constitutional rights, especially the right to a fair hearing and the principle of lawful, reasonable, and fair administrative action. In its affidavit, NamRA denied the allegations of unfairness or irrationality. The agency stated that Trustco had been given enough opportunity to respond and make representations. NamRA also rejected claims of acting with ulterior motives and insisted that no legal errors were made in handling Trustco’s tax matters. Court documents revealed that only 38 entities within the Trustco Group had a payment arrangement with NamRA. Trustco’s total tax liability stood at over N\$230 million by June 2021, and this rose to nearly N\$593 million by December 2023. The court dismissed Trustco’s application, rejecting its request to review the decisions made in letters dated October 3 and October 20, 2022.  The company’s attempt to have sections of the Income Tax Act and Value-Added Tax Act declared unconstitutional was also dismissed.  The case was heard by Justice Thomas Masuku Prinsloo, Justice Shafimana Ueitele, and Deputy Judge President Hosea Angula.  The matter has been removed from the roll and is now considered finalised.

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