Azimio One Kenya Alliance presidential aspirant Raila Odinga on Friday, June 17 has sided with Keroche Breweries amid its tax battle with Kenya Revenue Authority.
Speaking in a roadside rally in Thika, the former Prime Minister noted that there were people within the government who do not understand how business works.
Raila asked the government to end punitive tax measures, arguing that shutting down businesses do not only affect the investors but also the employees.
“Do not kíll the goose that lays the golden eggs,” Raila said.
The ODM leader asked the government to allow the brewer to continue with operations so as to be able to pay off the taxes.
Raila added that once elected, he would do away with punitive taxes and instead increase the tax base.
“Let Keroche go…If they can’t pay today let them pay tomorrow. Spread it out. These are Kenyans, even if they have your debt, where will they run away to
“If they can’t pay today help them to stay in business so that they can pay you,” he maintained.
KRA shut down Keroche on claims that it defaulted in their earlier agreement on the settlement of tax arrears.
In March this year, Keroche and KRA signed a payment plan that would see Keroche settle an undisputed tax amount of KSh957 million over a period of 24 months starting from January 2022.
However, efforts by the company to seek more time to pay the arrears had hit the wall.
“KRA has issued agency notices to the company’s bankers and instead of correctly notifying the banks of the KSh300 million we owe, it gave a wrong figure of KSh558.7 million,” Keroche CEO Tabitha Karanja said.
Karanja warned that the closure could drive Keroche’s over 400 employees and their dependants into poverty.
She also mentioned that beer worth at least KSh 350 million could go to waste if the brewer is not reopened in time to recover the losses.
“I plead with you, in the name of all the hundreds of innocent Kenyans whose livelihoods depend, directly and indirectly on this brewery, to allow us to reopen and resume full operations in order to keep them working and to enable us to meet our obligations to them and to the KRA,” Karanja added.