Vodafone has been asked to give a final reply by Tuesday on the Union government’s proposal for a non-binding conciliation to settle a Rs 11,200-crore tax dispute, Finance Minister P Chidambaram has said.
“The conciliation has not started. Why has it not started? As the CEO (chief executive) of Vodafone told me, they have multiple legal advisors and they do not seem to know which is the correct legal advice. We have written to them, recalling the promise made by the CEO when he met me that they will give a final answer in two-three weeks. I think we have told them to give us the final answer by December 31,” Chidambaram said in a TV interview.
“The conciliation has not started. Why has it not started? As the CEO (chief executive) of Vodafone told me, they have multiple legal advisors and they do not seem to know which is the correct legal advice. We have written to them, recalling the promise made by the CEO when he met me that they will give a final answer in two-three weeks. I think we have told them to give us the final answer by December 31,” Chidambaram said in a TV interview.
Seeking to resolve the long-standing tax dispute with Vodafone, the Cabinet in June had approved non-binding conciliation with the British telecom major.
The conciliation has been proposed under the Indian arbitration law and not under the UNCITRAL as sought by Vodafone. However, no timeframe has been set for conclusion of the conciliation proceeding.
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The Supreme Court last year had ruled in Vodafone's favour, saying that it was not liable to pay any tax over the acquisition of mobile phone assets in India from the Hong Kong-based Hutchison.
But the government, later in the year, changed the rules to enable it to make retroactive tax claims on the already- concluded deals.