Mawalla advocates wa Arusha

Naona ving'amuzi vya mawala vimekuja juu,hahaha,kwel ela ndo kila kitu. Kazeni buti wazeiya.
 
Wekeni hilo kasri kama lile la Lwakatare!!! Ila elimu yake ya sheria na ile mikataba mikubwa ya mabilioni ameisimamia vema!!! Kwani anatafutwa kwa ufisadi? I tell you unaweza ishi kwa raha sana ukishaielewa system na kujua kula nayo vema!!!
 
sioni ubaya kumdiscuss kwani utajiri wake unazidi mapato ya kazi yake
labda kwa vile ishu ipo mahakamani ukweli tutaujua
ni zaidi ya money laudering
nchi za wenzetu ukiwa na kipato kinachozidi lazima uhojiwe na wananchi pia watakureport ili ueleze chanzo cha fedha
watanzania tukianza kuhoji mafisadi wataacha kutuibia/
 
Mbona hayo ni mambo ya kawaida tu, kwani lami tatizo? wewe hujui maana ya connections? Hebu fuata kanuni hizi uone kama hutafanikiwa...

We need People to live with (usimdharau yeyote hata kama hana mahali pa kulala, au kuhusu kazi yake)
We need Power to live on (hii ni aina yeyote ya ujuzi,elimu au uzoefu wa kitu)
We need Principles to live at (hii ni kanuni-mfumo endelevu yenye nidhamu ya hali ya juu katika uongozi wa fedha/kipato)
We need Purposes to live in (haya ni malengo-sababu yanayohusu kitu unachokifanya)
We need Plans to live out. (Hapa ni mipango-mikakati ya yote niliyoyaandika hapo juu)

Nadhani utakuwa unanielewa nikisema utajiri wa huyu jamaa ni kitu cha kawaida.......na kwa taarifa yako, huyu jamaa hana hata mtoto wa kurithi hizo mali zote...take it from me!!
 
Jamani mtoa mada kataka kujua utajiri huo kautoa wap lakini watetezi wa MAWALLA imemshambulia na kusema anajituma bila kusema vyanzo vyake vya fedha sisi GREAT THINKER tupime kama ni proportion na utajiri alionao halafu pia mkae mkijua raia wote tuna haki ya kuhoji utajiri unaotia shaka kwa usalama wa nchi yetu.
 
Hapa ni jukwaa la sheria, je kavunja sheria ipi? mbona humsemi ...................
 
With new software, business registration to take only 3 days – Brela

By In2EastAfrica Reporter



Nyaga-Mawalla.jpg

Nyaga Mawalla


Businesses' and companies' incorporation services inTanzania will, in the near future, take only three days from the previous three months for the same to be legally recognised, the Business Registration Licensing Agency (Brela) made the assurance this week.

Until recently businessmen have been obliged to travel to BRELA offices in Dar-es-Salaam to get business names, incorporate companies, file annual returns as well as change directors or shareholders.

But, according to Brela's Managing director, this plight is set to be history, thanks to Mawalla Corporate Services for its ground-breaking invention of software that has eased the registration process.

With the Corporate and Property Data Profiling systems (CDP and PDP) software, one can register a company online in the comfort of their homes or at any internet café without physically visiting the state-run-Brela offices in Dar-es-Salaam.

"After seven years of painstaking experiments, sheer hard working and considerable private funding, the softwares are now ready for public consumption," Nyaga Mawalla, the chairman of Mawalla Corporate Services told a press conference on Monday.

Having spent USD543,850 to accomplish CDP and PDP programmes, Nyaga intends to enter into public-private partnership with Brela and the Programme to Formalise the Property and Businesses inTanzania (Mkurabita).

The proposed PPP will be providing business names registration, incorporation of companies, statutory corporate management and governance facilities throughout Tanzania – at no additional cost to the government, he said.

"The PPP will also expedite the implementation of the Business Activities Registration Act No. 14 of 2007 popularly known as the BARA Act," Mawalla explained.

He proposed to the government to embark on a country-wide registration of businesses and property legalisation built on a state-of the art digital network to be rolled-out in all Tanzania's major cities, towns and villages.

"These services will be provided to Brela and Mkurabita in a manner that ensures that the state agencies retain full control of their legislated duties," he said.

According to the plan, Mawalla Corporate Services will be facilitating the establishment of registration centres linked by fast internet connections in its website dedicated to company incorporations and management.

All business registration and management data posted on the systems from each centre would be immediately accessible to every other registration centre, so that business owners and entrepreneurs who need to incorporate companies or register business names can be properly advised, he said.

This service will be equally available both in Kiswahili and English, he said, adding that although Mawalla Corporate Services undertakes to charge neither Brela nor Mkurabita for the services, it will need to generate fees to be sustainable and improve its offering as uptake increases.
"The firm, therefore, will charge standard fees that will be kept affordable for applicants from all walks of life" Mawalla said, adding that with the CDP and PDP software, all businesses can effectively be brought into the tax net.

"The software can boost Tanzania's tax base and revenue significantly and additional funds will become available for building infrastructure and flying Tanzanians from a dire poverty to the promised land of prosperity." he noted.

The software will also have an online search system, which is a simplified format to ease the hassles that clients endure when enquiring to check the company information.

Source: The Guardian

Tanzanian Businessman faults wildlife law

By In2EastAfrica Reporter


Nyaga-Mawalla.jpg
Nyaga Mawalla
A prominent Lawyer cum businessman Mr Nyaga Mawalla has faulted operations and implementation of the new Wildlife Conservation Act of 2009, saying it will result in the government losing direct taxes of up to 50bn/- from hunting companies.
Addressing a press conference in Dar es Salaam on Wednesday, Mr Mawalla also noted that up to 5,200 employees would lose their jobs as foreign hunting companies will close down their operations on implementation of the Act.
Currently there are 30 foreign hunting companies which have been operating in the hunting business for the past 25 years and have applied for allocation of hunting blocks for the period of 2013 to 2018.
"Only nine foreign companies which represent 15 per cent of the total foreign companies will be allocated the blocks and therefore leaving out 21 companies to close down their operations," stressed Mr Mawalla.
Section 39(3)(a) of the Act provides that a minimum of 20 per cent of the shares in a foreign a hunting company shall be owned by Tanzanians in order for the company to be eligible for allocation of hunting blocks.
According to him, the requirement has thus forced the existing foreign companies which have secured their investment under Tanzania Investment Centre (TIC), to sell 25 per cent of their shares to locals so as to meet the requirement of the law.
"This requirement of the law conflicts with section 22 of the TIC Act, 1997 which guarantees all investors to own, whether wholly or in part, the capital of any business enterprise and not to be compelled by any law to cede his/her interest in the capital to any other person," noted Mr Mawalla who has also invested in tourism.
He noted further that such anomaly can create disputes between the government, TIC and foreign investors and consequently the investors might be forced to submit their disputes to arbitration forums, according to Tanzanian and international arbitration laws.
The lawyer whose office handles corporate legal services to dozens of local and international tourism, real estate and mining companies also observed that Section 39(3)(b) of the Act was unconstitutional as it contravenes Articles 13 of the Constitution of the United Republic of Tanzania.
"This provision is unconstitutional as it discriminates against those Tanzanians who own 25 per cent shares in the foreign hunting companies, as allocation of the blocks to such companies is restricted to only 15 per cent.
"This implies that a Tanzanian owning shares in a foreign company is treated differently from a Tanzanian owning shares in a local company which contravenes Article of the Constitution," he argued.

Mr Mawalla appealed to the government to review the Act as it would create fiasco and impeded efforts engineered by President Jakaya Kikwete to woo investors in the tourism sector.

The Minister for Tourism and Natural Resources Mr Ezekiel Maige has been quoted as saying that some of the loopholes in the Act would be plugged by the Act's regulations now in the making.

Source: Tanzania Daily News

 
Huyu jamaa ni mwizi mkubwa, ameibia WMA- Serengeti billions of money. Dili zake nikuwaleta wawekezaji wazungu anakula dili na wenyeviti wa kijiji anapewa ardhi then anaingia mkataba na wazungu wawekezaji.
 
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