Bharti faces Rs 1,067 cr TDS demand related to global operations

The Income Tax Department has slapped a Rs 1,067-crore demand notice on telecom giant

RELATED ARTICLES

Bharti Airtel for non-payment of TDS dues in the last four financial years in connection with its overseas operations, even as the company said it was fully compliant with all the provisions.

The department has asked the company to pay a total tax of Rs 1,067.24 crore under sections 201 (consequences of failure to deduct or pay taxes) along with section 195 (any person responsible for paying to a non-resident) of the I-T Act.

"Bharti Airtel is fully compliant on all applicable income tax provisions. This demand notice, pertaining to applicability of withholding tax on payments made to international operators, is not justified and we will take appropriate legal recourse," a company spokesperson said.

The payments, which the department said are to be made immediately, are for four financial years-- 2007-08 (Rs 202.07 crore), 2008-09 (Rs 329.913), 2009-10 (Rs 313.577 crore) and 2010-11 (Rs 221.681 crore) in lieu of payments made by the company to "non-resident mobile service providers".

The international taxation unit of the department has, according to sources, held that such payments are in nature of fee for technical services and are subjected to TDS deductions as per section 195 of the I-T Act.

The department, in its notice, also said that for payments of such taxes, the location of the company's property or place of conducting the operations is not "relevant".

Bharti Airtel offers a variety of telecom services both in India as well abroad.

The company claims to have a subscriber base of over 230 million across 19 countries.

Post new comment

E-mail ID will not be published
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

FC NEWSLETTER

Stay informed on our latest news!

EDITORIAL OF THE DAY

  • Foreign brokerages must be Street-smart to win battle of bourses

    Earlier this week, Financial Chronicle reported that foreign brokerages were failing to crack the retail broking market in India, once seen as very pr

INTERVIEWS

GV Nageswara Rao

MD & CEO, IDBI Federal Life

Timothy Moe

Goldman Sachs

Chander Mohan Sethi

CMD, Reckitt Benckiser India

COLUMNIST

Urs Schöttli

India needs to project soft power

The rise from a regional to a global p­ower is ...

Robert Clements

Walk the talk when giving others advice

The only thing one does with advice is to pass ...

Bubbles Sabharwal

Keeping our value system uninjured

Every time one reads a newspaper, there is fr­esh news ...