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Imposition of tax on Kayayei was an act of inhumanity - MFWA

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Executive Director of the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA), Sulemana Braimah has said the decision by the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP) to scrap levies collected from head porters popularly called Kayayei is not the solution to the problems they encounter.

According to him, "The imposition of a tax on Kayayeis was clearly an act of man's inhumanity to man, and an act of cruelty."

READ MORE: Here are the taxes Nana Addo will abolish in his government

He said a toll should not have existed in the first place for it to be abolished by the NPP government.

Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta has announced to parliament in the new administration’s first budget that Government will scrap duties paid by spare part dealers.

The toll is among several taxes lined up by the government to be scrapped completely to the ordinary Ghanaian and the business community.

On his Facebook page, Sulemana Braimah said "The imposition of a tax on kayayei was clearly an act of man's inhumanity to man, and an act of cruelty. So that tax shouldn't have been imposed in the first place, period. What should be removed is the kayayei phenomenon itself.

READ ALSO: Fiscal discipline will restore macroeconomic stability - Ken Ofori-Atta

"It should not even exist for us to be talking about taxes on it or removal of same. It should be a scar on our conscience that at this stage of Ghana's development, after 60 years of independence, we still have young women whose means of survival is to carry heavy loads on their heads in our cities. I mean young women! It is completely indecent and an assault on our pride as a nation.

"The young women, almost entirely from the three regions of the North, resort to [carrying loads] not as a matter of choice. They do so as a means of survival. Let no one tell me they make a lot of money. Those who argue that way may justify prostitution on the same grounds but will threaten mayhem if their daughters were to opt for ‘kaya’ or prostitution as a means of making a lot of money. The poverty and lack of opportunities that drive the young women into ‘kaya’ is what has to be confronted and dealt with. I hope we will do so as a nation."

READ MORE: How Abossey Okai reacted to spare-parts duty scrap

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