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MP Tax Associations Urge Centre to Drop Mandatory English Translation for GST Tribunal Appeals

MP Commercial Tax Bodies Seek Relaxation on English Translation Rule for GSTAT

Tax consultant associations in MP are requesting that the Central Government eliminate the condition of submitting English translations of records when filing appeals before the GST tribunal. They claim that this rule is unworkable in a Hindi-speaking state and charges unnecessary costs on taxpayers.

A tax professional from Indore demanded this, claiming that the existing provisions place an unnecessary compliance burden on appellants, especially small businesses and individual taxpayers.

Petition Given to Finance Minister

The Madhya Pradesh Tax Law Bar Association, along with the Commercial Tax Practitioners Association, has submitted a memorandum to the Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman requesting relief from the translation requirement.

From the associations, most orders issued by the State GST department are already in Hindi, rendering English translations at the appellate stage redundant and costly.

Rule 23 Condition Declared Inoperable

Under Rule 23, regulatory procedures of the Goods and Services Tax Appellate Tribunal, appeals filed in a language other than English need to be accompanied by translated copies of all supporting documents.

Read Also: How Modern GST Software Keeps Your Financial Data Safe

As per tax professionals, the same pre-requisite does not exhibit ground realities in Hindi-speaking states, where official communication and records are maintained in Hindi.

Legal Performance and Language Approach

According to the associations, Madhya Pradesh is categorised as a Hindi-priority state under language rules, and hence, the need to translate every document into English produces procedural issues.

The mentioned constitutional provisions mention that the English language requirement is applicable to the proceedings before higher constitutional courts, not statutory tribunals like the GST Appellate Tribunal.

Demand for the Hindi Language to Enhance Justice

Tax bodies asked the Centre to permit tribunal benches in Hindi-speaking states to accept appeals, orders, and pertinent documents in Hindi without mandatory translations.

They cited that the same amendment shall lessen litigation costs, ease compliance, and ensure fair access to justice for taxpayers.

Major Impact on Experts

Experts assume that if the demand is accepted, then the same can make GST dispute resolutions more inclusive and efficient whole setting a precedent for other states where regional languages dominate the procedure of administration.

Disclaimer:- "All the information given is from credible and authentic resources and has been published after moderation. Any change in detail or information other than fact must be considered a human error. The blog we write is to provide updated information. You can raise any query on matters related to blog content. Also, note that we don’t provide any type of consultancy so we are sorry for being unable to reply to consultancy queries. Also, we do mention that our replies are solely on a practical basis and we advise you to cross verify with professional authorities for a fact check."

Published by Arpit Kulshrestha
Arpit Kulshrestha seeks higher interests in financial services, taxation, GST, I-T, etc. Writes articles with depth knowledge and is extensive for the same. The resources provide effective articles for the products of SAG infotech which provides taxation and IT software. Writing from observations and researching makes his articles virtuous.
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