Shoura: No taxes on expats

April 4, 2012

sau


Riyadh, April 4: The Shoura Council rejected a move to tax the incomes of individual expatriate workers in the public and private sectors at its 18th regular session yesterday.


The session was chaired by Council Vice President Dr. Mohammed bin Amin Jafri.


Secretary-General of the Shoura Council Dr. Mohammed Al-Ghamdi said the council made the decision after hearing the arguments for and against the proposal.


He added that since proponents of the move could not attain the requisite majority in the house to secure approval, it was rejected. He said the Kingdom is implementing a number of developmental projects in various sectors that need professional skills.


Supporters felt if approved, the proposal would have helped bridge the gap between the wages of Saudis and non-Saudis and increased the chances for locals to work in the private sector. Al-Ghamdi clarified the proposal had been submitted some time ago.


News that the debate on the issue had been revived had drawn criticism from the expatriate community, especially low-paid workers.


According to a local newspaper, the finance committee of the Shoura Council has recommended carrying out fresh studies on the possibility of imposing tax on all foreigners working in both the public and private sectors in the Kingdom.


The source said the new proposal was made by council member Muhammad Al-Quwaihes, who presented it as an additional recommendation attached to the annual report of the Department of Zakat and Income Tax that had already been discussed by the house.


“The government is neither levying a single riyal in tax or Zakat on foreign workers remittances, nor do they need to pay any kind of taxes,” Al-Quwaihes said.


An expatriate, Sauda Salem, expressed dismay at the possibility foreign workers may have to pay income tax.


“It is a great shock for all expats who are not managers or making good money,” he said.


As most foreigners are unable to meet their expenses, their wives try to support them by working small jobs, he added


“I request them to reconsider the plan of taxing expats only to support Saudization,” he suggested.


Another expat, Mohammad Nazeer, claimed expatriates would be happy to contribute to the Saudi economy by paying income tax on their salaries and bonuses, adding they were very grateful for the generous tax-free salaries and benefits enjoyed in Saudi Arabia.


Another worker, Tanveer Ahmad, was willing to pay Zakat as long as the money went to the needy.


“As a Muslim, in order to make my earnings fully Halal, I should pay 2.5 percent of my earnings toward Zakat. I do pay it, but only in my native country where there are needy people. I have no objection to paying Zakat here if the government makes sure it goes to the needy,” he said


According to Shoura member, Al-Quwaihes, levying an income tax on foreigners would boost the ongoing Saudization drive. “Foreigners working in the Kingdom transfer about SR100 billion to their countries of origin annually,” he said.


Al-Quwaihes noted most countries in the world impose income taxes on individuals who work and earn money in those countries.


“It is high time we impose income tax on foreigners. It is also to be noted that foreign workers are beneficiaries of all government support and subsidies on utility services and products such as water, electricity, wheat, and petroleum products,” he said.


Nearly a decade ago, the Shoura Council reviewed the possibility of imposing taxes on foreign workers but later the proposal was shelved.


There are 8 million foreigners in the Kingdom, an overwhelming majority of them in the private sector.


For another expatriate, Dr. Victoria Charlston, imposing taxes on foreigners would mean the job market would instantly lose many of its Western professionals.


“Financial reward is pretty much the only reason why Westerners decide to spend a stint of their working lives in KSA. There is little other reason or incentive. Let’s hope that KSA will have enough of its own educated, highly trained manpower who will fill the gap if expatriates leave.”


She said taxing non-Westerners earning low salaries for their hard labor was akin to daylight robbery.


“They have so few rights compared to their fellow countrymen who happen to live and work in other countries around the globe, and to tax them would be another nail in their coffin,” she said.


“Should taxes be imposed on all foreigners, and this term in itself is laughable as many so-called foreigners are third and fourth generation citizens who would long ago have enjoyed equal rights to citizens should they have settled elsewhere in the world, then they should immediately and justly be afforded similar status to KSA nationals.


“Furthermore, to repeatedly discuss and question in newspaper columns these workers’ rights to send their hard earned money to their relatives overseas is quite frankly a disgrace. Their money is simply the fruit of their labor, to dispose of as they wish.


“They have not been lazily sitting on their backsides waiting for money to be deposited in their bank accounts, as many of KSA’s youngsters do. When one makes the decision to work in KSA, one immediately has to give up certain aspects of life that would be enjoyed in one’s homeland. This sacrifice is offset by a rewarding salary.”


Both Saudi and expatriate employees working in the Kingdom had to pay income tax until it was abolished in 1975. Later, there were moves to reintroduce income tax on foreigners in the late 80s. However, in 1988, King Fahd scrapped the plans.


At present, only Saudi citizens and Saudi companies need to pay Zakat of 2.5 percent annually on profits and on the assessable amount for individuals, in addition to a tax on foreign investors. In a bid to attract more foreign investment into the Kingdom, the government slashed in 2004 the tax rate imposed on foreign investors from 45 to 20 percent.


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News Network
December 18,2024

The Israeli prime minister says the regime's troops will remain stationed at a so-called “buffer zone” inside the occupied Syrian Golan Heights, seized following the fall of President Bashar al-Assad, until another arrangement is found that will "ensure the usurping regime’s security."

Benjamin Netanyahu made the comments on Tuesday from the summit of Mount Hermon, known as Jabal al-Shaykh in Arabic, the highest peak in the area — inside Syria, about 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the border with the strategic Golan Heights.

He was joined by the Israeli minister for military affairs, Israel Katz, Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Herzi Halevi, head of the so-called internal security service Shin Bet, Ronen Bat, and Northern Command chief Major General Uri Gordin.

Netanyahu reiterated that Israel would remain in the area “until another arrangement can be found that guarantees Israel’s security.”

The prime minister said he had been on the same mountaintop 53 years ago as a soldier, but the summit’s importance to the Tel Aviv regime’s security has only increased given recent events.

It appeared to be the first time a sitting Israeli leader had set foot that far into Syrian territory.

For his part, Katz said Israeli forces would remain on the Syrian summit of Mount Hermon for “as long as necessary.”

He said, “We will stay here for as long as necessary,” asserting that deployment of Israeli troops to the strategically significant summit “strengthens security.”

“Mount Hermon's summit is Israel's eyes for identifying near and distant threats. From here, we can see Hezbollah positions in Lebanon to the right, and Damascus to the left,” Katz said.

Israeli military forces captured the UN-patrolled buffer zone in the Golan Heights hours after armed groups took control of the Syrian capital of Damascus on December 8.

Israel has been widely and vehemently condemned over termination of the 1974 ceasefire agreement with Syria, and exploiting the chaos in the Arab nation in the wake of Assad’s downfall to make a land grab.

The buffer zone in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights was created by the United Nations after the 1973 Arab-Israeli War.  A UN force of about 1,100 troops had patrolled the area since then.

Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, said on Tuesday that the presence of Israeli soldiers, however long it lasts, violates the deal that established the buffer zone.

That agreement “needs to be respected, and occupation is occupation, whether it lasts a week, a month or a year, it remains occupation,” Dujarric pointed out.

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News Network
December 16,2024

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The Israeli regime sustains its heavy attacks against various areas across Syria as Western-backed militants, who ousted the country’s government earlier this month, strengthen their foothold.

On Monday, the regime’s warplanes struck vital facilities and military infrastructure along the country’s western coastline, including the cities of Tartus and Latakia, where they pounded missile bases and ammunition depots.

Massive explosions rang out across the cities during the attacks.

Lebanon’s al-Mayadeen television network said Israeli occupation forces had also advanced as far as 15 kilometers (9 miles) in the western Syrian province of Quneitra.

'An earthquake'

Russia’s Sputnik news agency also reported Israeli assaults against military facilities in Hama and Homs, two other western provinces, adding that attacks against Hama and Aleppo, which is likewise situated in western Syria, shook the targeted areas like an “earthquake.”

Local sources, meanwhile, reported that the regime’s warplanes had also hit the Military Airport in the eastern province of Deir al-Zawr.

The agency cited sources as saying that Israeli warships had launched a number of missiles towards the Syrian coast, especially targeting the Tartus Province.

According to them, this was the first time that the Israeli military was deploying “such missiles” against Syria’s military sites.

The reports came a day after the regime attacked the positions that used to belong to the country’s Republican Guard and the Syrian military’s Fourth Armored Division in the Tal Mneen area and the town of Hafir, north of the capital Damascus.

Also on Sunday, Israeli forces occupied three new villages across the country, namely the Jamla village in the western Syrian province of Dara’a as well as the Mazraat Beit Jan and Mughr al-Mir رillages in Rif Dimashq Province.

Israeli aircraft also bombed an air defense site in the town of Muhajja in the eastern countryside of Dara’a’s capital and attacked the warehouses of the Syrian military’s 18th Armored Division in the eastern suburbs of Homs.

The regime has markedly intensified its deadly attacks against the country, especially targeting its military infrastructure, in the aftermath of its takeover by anti-Damascus militants, who are widely reported to have been receiving extensive military support and cooperation on the part of the Israeli regime and the West.

As part of its aggression, the regime has expanded its occupation of Syria’s Golan Heights, overrunning a buffer zone in the territory, and announced plans to ramp up the population of illegal settlers in the mountainous region.

Regional Arab states, including Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, and Iraq, have lashed out at Tel Aviv over the measures.

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News Network
December 26,2024

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The UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) says the northern part of the Gaza Strip has been going through “the hell of the hell" amid Israel's bombing campaign on civilian facilities and blockade of aid for almost three months.

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She was also asked about the situation in the Kamal Adwan hospital, which is still barely functioning in northern Gaza despite an Israeli order to shut down and evacuate.

Touma said the evacuation orders of medical centers and raids on them "have become commonplace in Gaza" since last October, when Israel unleashed its genocidal war on the Palestinian territory.

“We shouldn’t become numb, though, to the fact that this happens all the time. Because, at the end of the day, this is a violation of international law," she added.

"This is crossing a very thick red line and way too many times the rules of war have been broken in Gaza, and those responsible must be held accountable."

Over the past few months, Israel has used tanks, snipers and quadcopters to attack the Kamal Adwan hospital, where over 400 civilians have sought medical care and shelter.

On Wednesday, Physicians for Human Rights - Israel (PHRI), an Israeli NGO that advocates for medical rights, filed an urgent petition with the regime's top court to end the ongoing attacks on the Kamal Adwan hospital.

The petition calls for the establishment of a humanitarian corridor to deliver medical supplies, fuel, and for the safe evacuation of patients and staff.

“The relentless attacks on Kamal Adwan hospital have caused catastrophic harm to medical infrastructure, claimed the lives of patients and staff, and denied access to essential healthcare services," it said.

"Under international law, Israel is obligated to protect the safety and security of patients, medical personnel, and healthcare facilities—even in times of conflict.”

Israel launched its brutal Gaza onslaught on October 7, 2023, after the Palestinian Hamas resistance group carried out a historic operation against the usurping entity in retaliation for its intensified atrocities against the Palestinian people.

So far, the occupying regime has killed at least 45,361 Palestinians, mostly women and children, and injured 107,803 others, in Gaza. 

Since early October, Israel has intensified its attacks in the northern Gaza Strip, cut the area off from the rest of the territory, and blocked nearly all food aid from entering the region.

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