OpenCharities

This text was generated using OCR and may contain errors. Check the original PDF to see the document submitted to the regulator. This document is also available as Markdown.

2025-03-31-accounts

maNG6ma mutual assistance mutual advantage ANNUAL REPORT 2024/25

FOREWARD

This year marked an important period of reflection and renewal for maNGOma. As well as continuing our support for partner NGOs, we began planning a refreshed organisational direction, with a greater emphasis on our second charitable aim: facilitating the sharing of knowledge and experience among grassroots organisations across borders.

FIGURE 1.

MaNGOma partner Rural Community Development Service empowers marginalised communities in Nepal

ABOUT MANGOMA

maNGOma (mutual assistance for NGOs for mutual advantage) is a UK-based organisation supporting community groups and NGOs both in the UK and internationally. We work at the intersection of climate change, ecological breakdown, poverty, education, health, population displacement and regional conflict. Our partnerships focus on small grassroots NGOs, helping them turn project proposals into reality by collaborating on funding applications and organisational development.

In the UK we have supported groups working with refugees, migrant communities and disadvantaged young people. Our Board brings together diverse, international experience in community project management, international development, and charity business development. Much of our volunteer team is drawn from the University of East Anglia’s School of Global Development (UEA), with volunteers based both in the UK and overseas.

FIGURE 2.

MaNGOma partner School Connect provides opportunities for uyoung people in Uganda.

ACTIVITIES REPORT

The maNGOma Newsletter

TThroughout the year, the newsletter continued to amplify the voices of grassroots organisations in the Global South. Each edition featured a partner “spotlight” highlighting locally led innovation—ranging from SISCODE’s IT training for girls in Ghana to ZimConserve’s climate-resilient agriculture in Zimbabwe and HAGMA’s menstrual-health initiatives in Uganda.

The newsletter also explored wider global-development issues: the shrinking funding available to Global South civil society; increasing water scarcity; the accelerating loss of coral reefs; and the fact that fewer than 20% of the UN Sustainable Development Goals remain on track.

We reported on new policy debates—tax justice, debt restructuring, and aid cuts in the UK and US— and covered emerging trends such as social enterprise models, women-led cooperatives, and digital technologies (AI, crypto-giving and algorithmic fundraising).

The newsletter also facilitated business development across our readership by linking strategic insights, resources and research, and highlighted our UK engagement activities including participation in Global Donut Day and contributions to networks such as BOND.

Together, these updates portrayed a picture of global challenges alongside the practical, hopeful solutions emerging from our partners.

Kenya Poverty Action

A major achievement this year was securing Charity Commission registration for Kenya Poverty Action (KPA), a new UK charity created to strengthen the presence of Kenyan grassroots organisations in the UK and broaden fundraising pathways.

KPA is dedicated to community-led poverty reduction in underserved regions. Its work spans: human capital and social development; clean water, sanitation and hygiene; youth and women’s empowerment; climate-smart agriculture and food security; and digital inclusion and disaster-risk reduction. KPA plans to offer catalytic grants for new ideas, operational support for established projects, and emergency response funding. The initiative reflects maNGOma’s commitment to strengthening locally led action and widening global solidarity.

Film Festival

Together with Norwich Eco Hub and Reimagine Norwich, we cohosted a successful film festival at Cinema City. The programme included:

Where Olive Trees Weep – a documentary exploring the lived realities of Palestinians under occupation, touching on generational trauma, dispossession, imprisonment, water injustice and resilience.

2040 – an optimistic, solutions-focused climate documentary visualising what the world could look like if existing sustainable innovations were scaled by 2040.

The screenings prompted rich audience discussion on global inequality, climate justice and community-led change.

FIGURE 3.

maNGOma partner Kenya Poverty Action tackles poverty and inequality in Kenya.

Fundraising and Partner Support

Volunteers worked on proposals supporting our partner NGOs, including:

Health and Water Foundation (Kenya): development of a youth entrepreneurship project in Kisii and work on improved sanitation in primary schools.

Across the year, Trustees reviewed progress with all partner NGOs in Zimbabwe, Cameroon, Kenya, Uganda and Ghana. ZimConserve and HWF/KPA remained the most active projects, while some partners saw limited progress due to capacity challenges.

Training seminars

We again collaborated with the University of East Anglia (UEA) School of Global Development to deliver a two-day training programme on fundraising and strategic development. Participants explored the skills essential for effective fundraising—from writing and research to relationship-building and financial planning—and were introduced to key funding pathways, project-analysis tools, and approaches to demonstrating impact.

The training remains an important bridge between UEA students and real-world NGOs.

FIGURE 4.

MaNGOma partner Camaay provide opportunities for young people in Cameroon.

EXPANDING MANGOMA’S ROLE

During this period, Trustees articulated a broader purpose for maNGOma, including:

These developments mark the beginning of maNGOma’s evolution into a more holistic, knowledge-driven and outward-facing organisation.

FIGURE 5.

MaNGOma partner Abbacol enables vulnerable children, young people and indigenous families create lasting social and ecological change in Columbia.

VOLUNTEER RECRUITMENT AND INTERNAL CAPACITY

Volunteer capacity remained a challenge. In response, we developed clearer onboarding processes, expanded the G-Drive resource base, and began planning wider volunteer roles beyond bid writing in accordance with our strategic development—including communications, research, blog writing, facilitating NGO collaboration and public-facing engagement

FUTURE PLANS

Looking ahead, we aim to strengthen our partnerships, deepen our capacity to support NGO fundraising and development, and build our knowledge-sharing role across networks in the UK and the Global South. We will continue engaging with partners on international development, climate justice and sustainability, aligning global awareness with local action in Norwich and beyond.

FIGURE 6.

MaNGOma partner IRUKA empowers women and girls across Africa.

.

No (if any) No (if any)
maNGOma 1169841
06/04/2024
05/04/2025
Receipts and payments accounts
Period start date
Period end date
To
For the period
from
~~ee~~
~~ee ee~~
CC16a
Section A Receipts and payments
Unrestricted
funds
Restricted
funds
Endowment
funds
Total funds Last year
to the nearest £ to the nearest £ to the nearest £ to the nearest £ to the nearest £ to the nearest £
A1 Receipts
Openingbalance 2,029 - - 2,029 616 616
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
Sub total(Gross income for (Gross income for
AR) AR) 2,029 - - 2,029 616 616
A2 Asset and investment sales,
(see table).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Sub total -
-
-
-
-
Total receipts
2,029
-
-
2,029
616
~~——————~~
A3 Payments
Subscriptions 89 - - 89 179 179
Training 65 - - 65 320 320
Web hosting 65 65
Web development 125 - - 125 250 250
Insurance 266 - - 266 242 242
Film events 679 - - 679 - -
Staff - - - - 70 70
Grantspaid out - - - - 3 3,400
Publicityandpromotion - - - - 618 618
Venue Hire
Refreshments - - - -
Volunteer Expenses
Office supplies 68 68
Banks Charges
**Sub total ** 1,224 - - 1,224 5,212 5,212
A4 Asset and investment
purchases, (see table)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Sub total -
-
-
-
-
Total payments
1,224
-
-
1,224
5,212
~~——————~~
Net of receipts/(payments)
A5 Transfers between funds
A6 Cash funds last year end
Cash funds this year end
805
-
-
805
-
- -
-
-
- -
-
805
-
- 805
~~SSSSS~~
- 4,596
-
-
- 4,596
- 4,596
-
-
- 4,596

CCXX R1 accounts (SS)

17/11/2025

1

Section B Statement of assets and liabilities at the end of the period Section B Statement of assets and liabilities at the end of the period Section B Statement of assets and liabilities at the end of the period
Categories
Signed by one or two trustees on
behalf of all the trustees
B1 Cash funds
B2 Other monetary assets
B4 Assets retained for the
charity’s own use
B5 Liabilities
B3 Investment assets
Signature
~~SAWiseman~~
n/a
Details
Details
n/a
Unspent cabank balance
Details
Details
Total cash funds
(agree balances with receipts and payments
account(s))
n/a
Details
n/a
Unrestricted
funds
Restricted
funds
to nearest £
to nearest £
848
-
-
-
-
-
848
-
Agreement Error
OK
Unrestricted
funds
Restricted
funds
to nearest £
to nearest £
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Fund to which
asset belongs
Cost (optional)
-
-
-
-
-
Fund to which
asset belongs
Cost (optional)
-
-
-
Fund to which
liability relates
Amount due
(optional)
-
-
-
-
-
Print Name
Stephen Wisemen
Endowment
funds
to nearest £
-
-
-
-
OK
Endowment
funds
to nearest £
-
-
-
-
-
-
Current value
(optional)
-
-
-
-
-
Current value
(optional)
-
-
-
When due
(optional)
Date of
approval
~~SAWiseman~~ Stephen Wisemen 17/11/2025

CCXX R2 accounts (SS)

17/11/2025

2