Adebimpe Balogun, the first female President of the Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria (CITN), will deliver the lecture commemorating the 82nd birthday of Wole Soyinka. Discussing alongside Balogun will be, Auwal Musa (Rafsanjani), Executive Director of Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC), Modupe Oyekunle, President of NECA’s Network of Entrepreneurial Women (NNEW), Simon Kolawole, Founder & CEO of The Cable Newspaper, Emuesiri Agbeyi, Tax Partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, and Deremi Atanda, Executive Director of Systemspecs. Opeyemi Agbaje, Managing Director of Resources and Trust Company will moderate the event. Tunde Fowler, the Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) has also confirmed the agency’s participation.
As the 30th July due date for filing outstanding tax returns by companies to the FIRS draws near, the WSCIJ intends to use the lecture to contribute to strategic thinking and provide a veritable opportunity to raise critical questions for national debate on issues surrounding taxation. These will include the importance of taxation to development, evaluating the compliance rate, technology driven payment, the lack of trust for wise use of funds generated by the government, the level of reportage of the issue in the media and many more.
The lecture is an annual programme of the organisation designed to examine varying topical issues that have a reverberating effect on the perceived performance of the media on the health of Nigeria, and its democracy. It has since 2009 held on 13 July, to honour Soyinka, while also drawing attention to critical national issues.
Admittance to the event is open to journalists, accountants, lawyers, tax experts and agencies, pressure groups, policy makers, members of the diplomatic corps and other stakeholders in the civil society.
Signed,
Motunrayo Alaka,
Centre Coordinator.
motunrayo@wscij.org ; wscij@wscij.org
ABOUT WOLE SOYINKA CENTRE FOR INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM
The Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism (WSCIJ) is a non-governmental organisation with a vision to stimulate the emergence of a socially just community defined by the ethics of inclusion, transparency and accountability through support to journalists.
Initially known as the Wole Soyinka Investigative Reporting Award (WSIRA) at inception in 2005, the change in name became necessary in 2008 to reflect the intentions of the coordinators to embrace a more robust line of activities that have greater capacity for engendering the right values of investigative journalism in the Nigerian media.
The Centre is named after Professor Wole Soyinka in recognition of his life-long work in support of the freedom of expression, freedom to hold opinion, and freedom to impart them without fear or favour and without hindrance or interference.
As the 30th July due date for filing outstanding tax returns by companies to the FIRS draws near, the WSCIJ intends to use the lecture to contribute to strategic thinking and provide a veritable opportunity to raise critical questions for national debate on issues surrounding taxation. These will include the importance of taxation to development, evaluating the compliance rate, technology driven payment, the lack of trust for wise use of funds generated by the government, the level of reportage of the issue in the media and many more.
The lecture is an annual programme of the organisation designed to examine varying topical issues that have a reverberating effect on the perceived performance of the media on the health of Nigeria, and its democracy. It has since 2009 held on 13 July, to honour Soyinka, while also drawing attention to critical national issues.
Admittance to the event is open to journalists, accountants, lawyers, tax experts and agencies, pressure groups, policy makers, members of the diplomatic corps and other stakeholders in the civil society.
Signed,
Motunrayo Alaka,
Centre Coordinator.
motunrayo@wscij.org ; wscij@wscij.org
ABOUT WOLE SOYINKA CENTRE FOR INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM
The Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism (WSCIJ) is a non-governmental organisation with a vision to stimulate the emergence of a socially just community defined by the ethics of inclusion, transparency and accountability through support to journalists.
Initially known as the Wole Soyinka Investigative Reporting Award (WSIRA) at inception in 2005, the change in name became necessary in 2008 to reflect the intentions of the coordinators to embrace a more robust line of activities that have greater capacity for engendering the right values of investigative journalism in the Nigerian media.
The Centre is named after Professor Wole Soyinka in recognition of his life-long work in support of the freedom of expression, freedom to hold opinion, and freedom to impart them without fear or favour and without hindrance or interference.
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