LIBYA
AGREEMENT FOR AVOIDANCE OF DOUBLE TAXATION AND
PREVENTION OF FISCAL EVASION WITH LIBYAN ARAB JAMAHIRIYA
Whereas the annexed Convention between the Socialist Peoples
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya and the Government of the Republic of India for the
avoidance of double taxation and the prevention of fiscal evasion with respect
to taxes on income has been ratified and the instruments of ratification
exchanged as required by Article 25 of the said Convention ;
Now, therefore, in exercise of the powers conferred by section
90 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (43 of 1961) and section 24A of the Companies
(Profits) Surtax Act, 1964 (7 of 1964), the Central Government hereby directs
that all the provisions of the said Convention shall be given effect to in the
Union of India.
NOTIFICATION : No. GSR 22(E), dated 1-7-1982.
TEXT OF ANNEXED CONVENTION, DATED 2-3-1981
CHAPTER I
SCOPE OF THE
CONVENTION
ARTICLE 1
TAXES COVERED
1. This Convention shall apply to taxes on
income imposed on behalf of each Contracting State or local authorities,
irrespective of the manner in which they are levied.
2. They shall be regarded as taxes on
income - all taxes imposed on total income, or on elements of income.
3. The existing taxes to which this
Convention shall apply are :
(A) |
|
With regard to the Socialist Peoples Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya : |
(i) |
|
real estate revenue tax ; |
(ii) |
|
agricultural revenue tax ; |
(iii) |
|
taxes on commercial, industrial and professional profits,
which comprise— |
(a) |
|
taxes on profits realised from commercial, industrial and
professional activities, |
(b) |
|
taxes on companies ; |
(iv) |
|
taxes on profits realised by practising fee professions ; |
(v) |
|
taxes on wages, salaries and the like ; |
(vi) |
|
taxes on income realised abroad ; |
(vii) |
|
general tax on income ; |
(viii) |
|
al-jihad tax (deference tax) ; |
(ix) |
|
income arising from depositing money in banks and savings
accounts. |
(B) |
|
With regard to the Republic of India : |
(i) |
|
the income-tax including any surcharge thereon imposed
under the Income-tax Act, 1961 (43 of 1961) ; |
(ii) |
|
the surtax imposed under the Companies (Profits) Surtax
Act, 1964 (7 of 1964). |
4. The Convention shall also apply to any
identical or substantially similar taxes which are subsequently imposed in
addition to, or in place of, the existing taxes. At the end of each year, the
competent authorities of the Contracting States shall notify to each other any
changes which have been made in their respective taxation laws.
CHAPTER II
DEFINITIONS
ARTICLE 2
GENERAL DEFINITIONS
1. In this Convention, unless the context
otherwise requires,—
(a) |
|
the terms "a Contracting State" and "the
other Contracting State" mean "India" or "Libya", as
the context requires ; |
(b) |
|
the term "person" comprises an individual, a
company and any other body of persons ; |
(c) |
|
the term "Company" means any body corporate or
any entity which is treated as a body corporate for tax purposes ; |
(d) |
|
the terms "enterprise of a Contracting State"
and "enterprise of the other Contracting State" mean respectively
an enterprise carried on by a resident of a Contracting State and an
enterprise by a resident of the other Contracting State ; |
(e) |
|
the term "competent authority" with respect to
the Socialist Peoples' Libyan Arab Jamahiriya means the Ministry of Treasury,
and with respect to India means the Ministry of Finance (Department of
Revenue). |
2. For the purposes of this Convention, the
term "resident of a Contracting State" means any person who, under
the law of that State, is liable to taxation therein by reason of his domicile,
residence, place of management or any other criterion of a similar nature.
3. As regards the application of the
Convention by a Contracting State any term not otherwise defined shall, unless
the context otherwise requires, have the meaning which it has under the laws of
that Contracting State relating to the taxes which are the subject of the
Convention.
ARTICLE 3
THE TAX HOME
Without
prejudice to the provisions of this Convention, the Tax Home of any income
shall be deemed to be the Contracting State in which the income arises.
ARTICLE 4
PERMANENT
ESTABLISHMENT
1. For the purposes of this Convention, the
term "Permanent establishment" means a fixed place of business in
which the business of the enterprise is wholly or partly carried on.
2. The term "permanent
establishment" shall include especially —
(a) |
|
a place of management, |
(b) |
|
a branch, |
(c) |
|
an office, |
(d) |
|
a factory, |
(e) |
|
a workshop, |
(f) |
|
a mine, quarry or other place of extraction of natural
resources, |
(g) |
|
a building or building site which continues for a period
of more than three months. |
3. The term "permanent
establishment" shall not be deemed to include —
(a) |
|
the use of facilities solely for the purpose of storage
and display of goods or merchandise belonging to the enterprise ; |
(b) |
|
the maintenance of a stock of goods or merchandise
belonging to the enterprise solely for the purpose of storage and display ; |
(c) |
|
the maintenance of a stock of goods or merchandise
belonging to the enterprise solely for the purpose of processing by any other
enterprise ; |
(d) |
|
the maintenance of a fixed place of business solely for
the purpose of purchasing goods or merchandise, or for collecting
information, for the enterprise ; |
(e) |
|
the maintenance of a fixed place of business solely for
the purposes of advertising, for the supply of information, for scientific
research or for similar activities which have a preparatory or auxiliary
character, for the enterprise. |
4. A person acting in a Contracting State
on behalf of an enterprise of the other Contracting State other than an agent
of an independent status to whom paragraph (5) applies — shall be deemed
to be a permanent establishment in the first-mentioned State if he has, and habitually
exercises in that State, an authority to conclude contracts in the name of the
enterprise, unless his activities are limited to the purchase of goods or
merchandise for the enterprise.
5. An enterprise of a Contracting State
shall not be deemed to have a permanent establishment in the other Contracting
State merely because it carries on business in that other State through a
broker, general commission agent or any other agent of an independent status,
where such persons are acting independently in the ordinary course of their
business.
6. The fact that a company which is a
resident of a Contracting State controls or is controlled by a company which is
a resident of the other Contracting State, or which carries on business in that
other State (whether through a permanent establishment or otherwise) shall not
itself constitute for either company a permanent establishment of the other.
CHAPTER III
TAXATION OF INCOME
ARTICLE 5
INCOME FROM IMMOVABLE
PROPERTY
1. Income from immovable property may be
taxed in the Contracting State in which such property is situated.
2. The term "immovable property"
shall be defined in accordance with the law of the Contracting State in which
the property in question is situated.
ARTICLE 6
BUSINESS PROFITS
1. The profits of an enterprise of a
Contracting State shall be taxable in the State where the enterprise is
situated and also in the State where it has a permanent establishment, in which
case, the tax shall be limited to the profits attributable to the permanent
establishment.
2. Where an enterprise of a Contracting
State carries on business in the other Contracting State through a permanent
establishment situated therein, there shall in each Contracting State be
attributed to that permanent establishment the profits which it might be
expected to make if it were a distinct and separate enterprise engaged in the
same or similar activities under the same or similar condition and dealing
wholly independently with the enterprise of which it is a permanent
establishment.
3. In the determination of the profits of a
permanent establishment there shall be allowed as deduction expenses which are
incurred for the purpose of the permanent establishment whether such expenses
have been incurred in the State in which the permanent establishment is
situated or elsewhere in accordance with regulations of the State in which the
income is taxable.
4. No profit shall be attributed to a
permanent establishment by reason of the mere purchase by that permanent
establishment of goods or merchandise for the enterprise.
5. For the purpose of the preceding
paragraphs, the profits to be attributed to the permanent establishment shall
be determined by the same method year by year unless there is good and
sufficient reason to the contrary.
6. Where profits include items of income
which are dealt with separately in the other Articles of this Convention, then
the provisions of those Articles shall not be affected by the provisions of
this Article.
ARTICLE 7
SHIPPING AND AIR
TRANSPORT
Profits
from the operation of ships or aircraft in international traffic shall be
taxable only in the Contracting State in which the place of effective
management of the enterprise is situated.
ARTICLE 8
ASSOCIATED ENTERPRISES
Where—
(a) |
|
an enterprise of a Contracting State participates directly
or indirectly in the management, control or capital of an enterprise of the
other Contracting State, or |
(b) |
|
the same persons participate directly or indirectly in the
management, control or capital of an enterprise of a Contracting State and an
enterprise of the other Contracting State, and in either case conditions are
made or imposed between the two enterprises in their commercial or financial
relations which differ from those which would be made between independent
enterprises, then any profits which would, but for those conditions, have
accrued to one of the enterprises, but, by reason of those conditions, have
not so accrued, may be included in the profits of that enterprise and taxed
accordingly. |
It
is to be understood that the procedures available in the respective laws of
each Contracting State in this regard shall be applied.
ARTICLE 9
DIVIDENDS
1. Dividends paid by a company which is
registered in one of the Contracting States may be taxed in that State.
2. The term "dividends" shall be
defined in accordance with the law of the Contracting State in which the
company in question is registered.
ARTICLE 10
INTEREST
1. Interest arising in a Contracting State
and paid to a resident of the other Contracting State may be taxed in the
Contracting State where it arises.
2. The provisions of paragraph (1)
shall not apply if the recipient of the interest being a resident of a
Contracting State, has in the other Contracting State in which the interest
arises, a permanent establishment with which the debt-claim from which the
interest arises is effectively connected. In such a case, the provisions of
article 6 shall apply.
3. Interest shall be deemed to arise in a
Contracting State when the payer is that State itself, a political
sub-division, a local authority or resident of that State.
ARTICLE 11
ROYALTIES
1. Royalties arising in a Contracting State
may be taxable in that State.
2. The term "royalties" as used
in this article means payments of any kind as a consideration for the use of,
or the right to use, any copyright of literary, artistic or scientific work,
any patent, trade mark, design or model, plan, secret formula or process or for
the use of, the right to use, industrial, commercial, or scientific equipment,
or for information concerning industrial, commercial or scientific experience.
3. The term "royalties" as used
in this article shall exclude rentals and other income in respect of
cinematographic films. Such rentals and income shall, for the purpose of this
Convention, be considered the profits from business.
ARTICLE 12
INDEPENDENT PERSONAL
SERVICES
1. Income derived by a resident of a
Contracting State in respect of professional services or other independent
activities of a similar character shall be taxable only in that State unless he
has a fixed base regularly available to him in the other Contracting State for
the purpose of performing his activities. If he has such a fixed base, the
income may be taxed in the other Contracting State but only so much of it as is
attributable to that fixed base.
2. The term "professional
services" means independent activities according to the laws and
regulations in force in each Contracting State.
ARTICLE 13
DEPENDENT PERSONAL
SERVICES
Salaries,
wages, and similar emoluments arising in one of the Contracting States may be
taxable in the State where the services giving rise to that income are
performed but if such income is realised from work carried out on a ship or
aircraft operating in the field of international transport, it shall only be
taxable in the State where the place of effective management of the enterprise
is situated.
ARTICLE 14
DIRECTORS' FEES
Directors'
fees and similar payments derived by a resident of a Contracting State in his
capacity as a member of the Board of Directors of a Company which is a resident
of the other Contracting State may be taxed in that other State.
ARTICLE 15
ARTISTES AND ATHLETES
Notwithstanding
the provisions of articles 12 and 13, income derived by public entertainers,
such as theatre, motion picture, radio or television artistes and musicians,
and by athletes from their personal activities as such may be taxed in the
Contracting State in which these activities are exercised.
ARTICLE 16
PENSIONS
Pensions
and other similar income paid to a resident of a Contracting State in
consideration of past employment shall be taxable only in that State.
ARTICLE 17
GOVERNMENT
FUNCTIONS/CIVIL SERVICE
1. Remuneration paid by the Government of
one of the Contracting States to any individual for services rendered to that
Government in the discharge of governmental functions shall be exempt from tax
in the other State if the individual is not resident in that other State or is
resident in the other State solely for the purpose of rendering those services,
so provided, however, that such an individual has the nationality of that
Contracting State.
2. The provision of this article shall not
apply to payments in respect of services rendered in connection with any trade
or business carried on by either of the Government for purpose of profits.
3. In this article, "Government"
shall be deemed to include public corporation and any other similar parastatal
bodies.
ARTICLE 18
STUDENTS
1. Payments which a student or business
apprentice who is or was formerly a resident of a Contracting State and who is
present in the other Contracting State solely for the purpose of his education
or training receives for the purpose of his maintenance, education or training
shall not be taxed in that other State, provided that such payments are made to
him from sources outside that other State.
2. The provision of this article shall also
apply to the income which the student or business apprentice may derive from an
employment in the other Contracting State : provided that such employment is
related to his study or training and/or that the income deriving therefrom is
required by the student or trainee to meet his living expenses.
ARTICLE 19
PROFESSORS, TEACHERS
AND RESEARCHERS
A
professor, teacher or research worker from one of the Contracting States who
receives remuneration for teaching or carrying out research work during a
period of temporary residence not exceeding three months at a university,
college or other institute of higher education or scientific research in the
other Contracting State shall be exempt from tax in that other State, in
respect of that remuneration, provided that the period of three months may be
extended by similar periods.
CHAPTER IV
ELIMINATION OF DOUBLE
TAXATION
ARTICLE 20
TAX CREDITS
1. When a resident of a Contracting State
derives income which has also suffered tax in the other Contracting State, the
first-mentioned State shall allow a deduction from its tax on the income of
that person equal to the tax in the other Contracting State : provided that the
deduction shall not exceed that part of the tax, as computed before the
deduction is given which is applicable to the income taxed in the other
Contracting State.
2. Nothing in this Article contained shall
prevent the granting of such further relief as may be appropriate under the
provisions of the law of either Contracting State in respect of any amount by
which the tax in case of the States exceeds the credit allowed on its account
in the other State in accordance with the provisions of this Article.
CHAPTER V
SPECIAL PROVISIONS
ARTICLE 21
NON-DISCRIMINATION
1. The nationals of a Contracting State
shall not be subjected in other Contracting State to any taxation or any
requirement connected therewith which is other or more burdensome than the
taxation and connected requirements to which nationals of that other State in
the same circumstances are or may be subjected.
2. The term "national" means—
(a) |
|
all individuals possessing the nationality of a
Contracting State ; |
(b) |
|
all legal persons, partnerships and associations deriving
their status as such from the law in force in a Contracting State. |
3. The taxation of a permanent
establishment which an enterprise of a Contracting State has in the other
Contracting State shall not be less favourably levied in that other State than
the taxation levied on enterprises of that other State carrying on the same
activities. The provision shall not be construed as obliging a Contracting
State to grant to residents of the other Contracting State any personal
allowances, reliefs and reduction for taxation purposes on account of civil
status or family responsibilities which it grants to its own residents.
4. Enterprises of a Contracting State, the
capital of which is wholly or partly owned or controlled, directly or
indirectly, by one or more residents of the other Contracting State, shall not
be subjected in the first-mentioned Contracting State to any taxation or any
requirements connected therewith which is other or more burdensome than the
taxation and connected requirements to which other similar enterprises of that
first-mentioned State are or may be subjected.
ARTICLE 22
MUTUAL AGREEMENT
PROCEDURE
1. Where a resident of a Contracting State
considers that the actions of one or both the Contracting States result or will
result for him in taxation not in accordance with this Convention he may,
notwithstanding the remedies provided by the national laws of those States,
present his case to the competent authority of the Contracting State of which
he is a resident.
2. The competent authority shall endeavour,
if the objection appears to it to be justified and if it is not itself able to
arrive at an appropriate solution, to resolve the case by mutual agreement with
the competent authority of the other Contracting State, with a view to the
avoidance of taxation not in accordance with the Convention.
3. The competent authorities of the
Contracting States shall endeavour to resolve by mutual agreement any
difficulties or doubts arising as to the interpretation or application of the
Convention. They may also consult together for the elimination of double
taxation in cases not provided for in the Convention.
4. The competent authorities of the
Contracting States may communicate with each other directly for the purposes of
reaching an agreement in the sense of the preceding paragraphs. When it seems
advisable in order to reach agreement to have an oral exchange of opinions,
such exchange may take place through a commission consisting of representatives
of the competent authorities of the Contracting States.
ARTICLE 23
EXCHANGE OF
INFORMATION
1. The competent authorities of the
Contracting States shall exchange such information as is necessary for the
carrying out of this Convention and of the domestic laws of the Contracting
States concerning taxes covered by this Convention insofar as the taxation
thereunder is in accordance with this Convention. Information shall also be
exchanged as is necessary for the prevention of fiscal evasion of taxes which
are the subject of this Convention. Any information so exchanged shall be
treated as secret and shall not be disclosed to any persons or authorities
other than those concerned with the assessment or collection of the taxes which
are the subject of the Convention.
2. In no case shall the provisions of
paragraph (1) be construed so as to impose on one of the Contracting
States the obligation —
(a) |
|
to carry out administrative measures at variance with the
laws or the administrative practice of that or of the other Contracting State
; |
(b) |
|
to supply particulars which are not obtainable under the
laws or in the normal course of the administration of that or of the other
Contracting State ; |
(c) |
|
to supply information which would disclose any trade,
business, industrial, commercial or professional secret or trade process, or
information, the disclosure of which would be contrary to public policy. |
ARTICLE 24
DIPLOMATIC AND
CONSULAR OFFICIALS
Nothing
in this Convention shall affect the fiscal privileges of diplomatic or consular
officials under the general rules of international law or under the provisions
of special agreements.
CHAPTER VI
FINAL PROVISIONS
ARTICLE 25
ENTRY INTO FORCE
The
Convention shall enter into force upon the exchange of instruments of
ratification and its provisions shall have effect from the tax year commencing
after the said ratification.
Any
agreement reached shall be implemented notwithstanding any time limits in the
national laws of the Contracting State.
ARTICLE 26
TERMINATION
This
Convention remains in force until denounced by one of the Contracting States.
Either Contracting State may denounce the Convention through diplo-matic
channels by giving notice of termination at least 6 months before the end of
any calendar year beginning 5 years after the agreement enters into force. In
such event the Convention shall cease to have effect after the end of the
calendar year during which notice of the denouncing of the Convention is given
by one Contracting State to the other.
IN WITNESS of the agreement reached as above, the signatories
have today signed this Convention by virtue of the authority delegated to them
for this purpose by their respective Governments.
DONE in duplicate at Tripoli, on March 2, 1981 corresponding to
25, Rabiul Akhar 1390 P.D. in the English, Hindi and Arabic languages, all
texts being equally authoritative except in the case of doubt, the English text
shall prevail.
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