Published: Monday | April 27, 2009
Opposition Leader Portia Simpson Miller yesterday announced that the People's National Party (PNP) would be leading an islandwide protest against the Government's $18-billion tax package unveiled last Thursday.
Simpson Miller urged Jamaicans to wear something black tomorrow, to honk their horns or to keep their headlights on to register their disapproval of what she calls the most burdensome tax package ever.
"We are not about blocking (the roads)," she said. "Anytime I am going to have a protest, I will let you know, and if you want to send the police and the army for me, send them for me. I come from a bloodline that does not matter or doesn't care at all, as long as it is in the interest of the country."
Simpson Miller was addressing the PNP's National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Montego Bay, St James.
Hall meetings coming soon
The opposition leader also put the Government on notice that the PNP would intensify its protest with a vigil to be announced soon, as well as a series of public town-hall meetings to explain the full impact of the tax package, which takes effect today.
She also scolded the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) administration for its delay in providing the complete list of items which will now be taxed, having previously been exempt from general consumption tax (GCT).
On the weekend, reports from the Government indicated that the list of items to be taxed would be released today.
Making reference to former Prime Minister Edward Seaga's famous speech about the haves and the have-nots, Simpson Miller said the administration of his JLP successor, Bruce Golding, has transformed the country into 'the taxed' and 'the tax-nots'. She insisted the already most burdened Jamaicans would be most significantly affected by the additional $8.75-consumption tax on fuel and the removal of GCT from several items. "If the Government continues like this, the walls of the dam will break because the backs of the working and middle classes can take no more."
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