 Top mobile phone company officials share views after meeting Finance  minister William Mgimwa in Dar es Salaam yesterday. Nothing was said  about what they agreed, if anything, in the meeting.
                 Top mobile phone company officials share views after meeting Finance  minister William Mgimwa in Dar es Salaam yesterday. Nothing was said  about what they agreed, if anything, in the meeting. Dar es Salaam. CEOs of major mobile companies yesterday held a closed-door meeting with Finance minister William Mgimwa, a day after the government said it was open to dialogue over the disputed new Sim card tax charges.
The executives have in recent weeks been pushing  the government to review the Sh1,000 monthly charges on Sim card holders  for all mobile phone companies.
Top officials from Vodacom Tanzania, Airtel, Tigo  and Zantel met the minister for two hours after other attempts to have  the tax reviewed appeared to yield no fruits.
The mobile service providers who appeared united  after their meeting with the minister avoided talking to our reporters  who had camped at the ministry premises, expecting to learn what had  transpired in the meeting.
At around 4 pm the mobile operators came out of  the meeting and stood outside the ministry where they chatted among  themselves for almost 10 minutes before they left.
“I will talk, but not today. My office will be open tomorrow,” said Vodacom Tanzania managing director, Rene Meza.
Other officials who attended the meeting also  declined to talk to our reporter and directed the latter to the minister  whom they claimed was the right person to talk about issues that were  discussed in the get-together.
The government’s decision to meet mobile operators  can be described as a deliberate move to open dialogue on some taxes in  the telecommunication sector which have been raising concern among the  public.
Such pressure led the Finance minister this week  to announce that the government was ready for talks on among others, the  Sh1,000 monthly charge on Sim cards.
Finance minister William Mgimwa, however,  cautioned that since the Sh1,000 tax was aimed at raising about Sh160  billion to help address rural poverty, the discussion should be directed  at identifying alternative sources of revenue.
The government has been facing pressure from  mobile operators and the public who feel that the communication sector  needs to contribute more to the growth of the national economy.
Through the Mobile Association of Tanzania, the  phone companies issued a statement in the media calling upon the  government to withdraw the Sh1,000 tax charges on Sim cards in order to  enable more Tanzanians to own mobile phones.
 
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