Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08SANAA428
2008-03-15 14:04:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Sanaa
Cable title:  

TAXES, FEES AND RED TAPE -- BUSINESSMEN COMPLAIN

Tags:  ECON PGOV YM 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXYZ0000
RR RUEHWEB

DE RUEHYN #0428/01 0751404
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
R 151404Z MAR 08
FM AMEMBASSY SANAA
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 9147
C O N F I D E N T I A L SANAA 000428 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

FOR NEA/ARP

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/14/2018
TAGS: ECON PGOV YM
SUBJECT: TAXES, FEES AND RED TAPE -- BUSINESSMEN COMPLAIN
ABOUT DOING BUSINESS IN ADEN

Classified By: Ambassador Stephen A. Seche for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)

Summary
-------

C O N F I D E N T I A L SANAA 000428

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

FOR NEA/ARP

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/14/2018
TAGS: ECON PGOV YM
SUBJECT: TAXES, FEES AND RED TAPE -- BUSINESSMEN COMPLAIN
ABOUT DOING BUSINESS IN ADEN

Classified By: Ambassador Stephen A. Seche for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)

Summary
--------------


1. (C) During an early March visit to the southern port city
of Aden, the Ambassador found business contacts unhappy about
non-transparent fees and taxes, bureaucratic red tape and
difficulties in acquiring land. The Governor expressed a
desire to encourage increased investment, but offered no real
plan to do so. End Summary.

The Cost of Doing Business
--------------


2. (C) On a March 9-11 visit to the southern port city of
Aden, the Ambassador met with business contacts, government
officials and civil-society figures. Business contacts cited
elevated and inconsistent taxes and fees as major impediments
to doing business in the South. Adel Aqeel, General Manager
of Musallam Trading Est., told POL/E Chief that he had to
abandon a venture to import and resell automobiles when he
discovered that the capricious nature of "import fees" (which
often varied by as much as 1000 percent from day to day) made
it impossible for him to anticipate his costs. Abubakr Salem
Ba-Obeid, General Manager of Eimar for Ready Mix Concrete and
Contracting Ltd., also complained that varying fees made
predicting costs impossible.


3. (C) Even when fees are stable, interlocutors complained
that they were much higher than in the North. Basha
Bashraheel, General Manager of the independent daily
Al-Ayyam, complained that "taxes and fees are double to
triple what they are in the north. Electricity is one third
more; telephone service is twice as much." He added that
"even fish costs more in the South than in the North." He
said that a representative for Dell computers had complained
to him that everyone he met seemed to be asking for money and
estimated that the required licenses to market his computers
in Aden cost three to four times what they had cost him in
Sana'a. Bashraheel added that import fees in the port of
Aden were so high that, when a shipment was accidentally
off-loaded in Hodeidah, it turned out to be less expensive to
transport it overland to Aden.

Bound by Red Tape
--------------



4. (C) Bureaucratic delays also frustrate businessmen.
Abdulla Salem Al-Rammah, vice chairman for Trade Affairs,
complained to the Ambassador about the length of time it
takes to start a business in the South, asserting that it now
takes more than one year. Bashraheel complained that when he
recently attempted to get a load of 15 containers of
newsprint through customs it took him a week and he was
swamped by additional fees. At the same time, a northerner
of his acquaintance got a similar size shipment through
customs on the day it arrived and paid nothing.

For Want of a Few Acres
--------------


5. (C) Advantageous treatment given to northerners was also
an irritant to other businessmen in Aden, particularly in the
area of land acquisition. Ahmed Saeed Shukri, Deputy Manager
of the Al-Sahl Group for Trade and Engineering and a
transplanted northerner himself, told POL/E Chief that, while
southerners face great difficulties and long delays in
acquiring land, northerners can acquire it by "simply putting
their hands on it." Bashraheel joked that Aden was the only
Governorate in Yemen that had President Saleh as a land
commissioner. When asked what he meant, he responded that at
one point he overheard a land office employee tell a customer
that to get land you needed a letter from Saleh. He
speculated the employee was jokingly referring to the high
volume of presidential land grants crossing his desk. Hisham
Bashraheel, Basha's uncle and Editor-in-Chief of Al-Ayyam,
told the Ambassador that there were southerners who had been
waiting for land since the socialist era. Basha Bashraheel
opined that the ROYG wants to give as much land in the south
as possible to northerners in hopes that this will inspire
the new owners of the land to fight to defend it. Even if
the land in question is for personal rather than business
use, difficulties in obtaining it irritate investors. Aqeel
told POL/E Chief that in spite of the success of his business
he continues to live in an apartment because acquiring land
for a house is too difficult.

The Fish Rots From the Head
--------------




6. (C) While most interlocutors settled for voicing
complaints that merely hinted at corruption, Afra'a
al-Hariri, head of an Adeni women's shelter, explicitly
complained of it. When asked if she thought this corruption
extended as high as Governor Ahmed al-Kohlani, she laughed
and said, "of course." Basha Bashraheel minced no words on
the issue, calling al-Kohlani simply "the worst Governor ever
and the most corrupt."

I'm From the Government and I'm Here to Help
--------------


7. (C) Al-Kohlani asserted to the Ambassador that he was
focused on improving the business environment in his
Governorate. He, however, came at the problem from a
different angle than the businessmen. "Our largest concern,"
he told the Ambassador, "is infrastructure. We want to work
to renovate schools and roads." While he did not mention
improving access to electricity, at least two of the
businessmen POL/E Chief spoke to on the trip highlighted
inconsistent or unavailable electricity as a barrier to doing
business.


8. (C) The Governor also emphasized his desire to encourage
foreign investment but did not specify steps his government
would take to do so. Deputy Governor Abdul Karim Shaif
raised unfavorable media coverage as a barrier to investment.
Referring to coverage of violence in the country, he said,
"the free press does not stop at any bounds. When the
investor sees (reports of demonstrations and unrest) he
becomes hesitant."

Comment
--------------


9. (C) If the Governor is serious about encouraging
investment, the only way to achieve his stated goal of
returning the city to its former stature as a prominent
seaport, he might wish to redirect his efforts towards
increased transparency and consistency with respect to fees
and taxes, reduced costs for needed services and less
bureaucratic interference, rather than complaining about
journalists or building a few roads. End Comment.
SECHE