Trustees Annual Report & Financial Statement 1st April 2021- 31 st March 2022 Charity Commission Registraion No. 1189561 REFU "*IRtrXANI & B
CONTENTS lili Page 3 Our Mission & Values Page 4 Charity Inforniation Page 5 Statemcnt of Trustces, Rcsponsibilities Page 6 About Us Pllge 7 Where We Are Page 8 What We Do Page 10 Structure & Governance Page 11 Chairperson & Founder Statement Page 13 Kcy Achievements Page 19 Financial Overview Page 16 Independent Examination
OUR MISSION Humanitarian aid whatever it takes. Aiming to empower people who are displaced by involving them in the decision- making processes to the provision of support, we at Refugee Biriyani & B<inanas provide urgent aid and basic necessities with dignity and equity. We advocate for and share stories of, or from, the people we support; we aim to raise awareness and be a voice. We volunteer to fill gaps in humanitarian care, boosting morale and sustaining those who are forLibly displaced on Iheir journeys. OUR VALUES EMPOWERMENT INCLUSION VOICE EQUITY DIGNITY FAMILY Page 3
CHARITY INFORMATION Trustees on 31st March 2022 Ruhi Akhtar - Chair of Tru.stee,s Rhian Planchant - Treasurer Angela Curry Deborah Flounders Jane Elizabeth Hetherington Reglstered Address 52 Clifton Road, Newcastle Upon Tyne, NE4 8DQ Constitution Rcgistercd as a Charitable Incorporated Organisation (CIO) in England and Wales, no. 1189561 Independent Examiner Amsel Page von Spreckelsen Blackbird Charity Finance Shoreham-by-sea, United Kingdom Bank The Co-operative Bank p.l.c. P.0. Box l O I , l Balloon Street, Manchester, M60 4EP Website: www.retugeebiriyanibandnas.org Facebook: RefugeeBiriy<iniAndBananas Instagram . Refugee biriyanibananas Twitter . RBBOrganisation Page 4
STATEMENT OF TRUSTEES, RESPONSIBILITIES Year Ending 31st March 2022 The Trustees arc plcascd to present their annual report and financial statemcnt for the year ended 31 st March 2022. These financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the accounting principles set out by the Charity Comniission and comply with the charity s constitution. The Tru%tee% are re%pon.%ible for preparing the Tru%tee8' Annual Report and the financial statements in accordance with applicable law of the United Kingdom Accounting Stdnddrd% (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice). The law applicable to charities in England and Wales requires the trustees to prepare fin¢inLial sl(iiemenis for each fin<illLi<il ye<ir. This mu4l give (I true cind f<iir view ot the state ot at'tairs ot thc charity and ot" the incoming re,%ources and application of resources of the charity for that period, In preparing these tinancial %tatements, the trustees are required to: 8elect ,%uitable accounting policies and then apply thein consistently; observe the methods and principles in the Charities SORP; make judgements and estimate% that are red%onable and prudent; state whether applicable accounting standards have beeii followed, subject to any material departure.s disclosed and explained in the financial statements. prep<ire Ihe financial sialemeni% on (he going LonLern b(t%is unless it i appropriate to presume that the charity will continue in operation. The trustees (ire responsible for keeping proper accounting records th<lt di%clo%e with reasonable accuracy at any time the tinancial position ot the chiirity and enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Charities Act 201 I, the Charity (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008 and the provisions of the trust deed. Page 5
ABOUT US Background Refugee Biriyani & Bananas (RBB) was formed initially as a grassroots movement in response to the escalation of the Syrian refugee crisis in 2015. They were a group of friends who decided to cook and distribute 2,5(X) portions of biriyani and bananas for all residents of the unofficial refugee camp in Dunkirk, Northern France. When the group returned home, they felt that could not turn their backs on the people affected by Ihe refugee crisis, and they knew they had to continue to help. They then decided to t'oi"m a grassroots org(inisation called Retugee Bii"iyani & Banana.s (RBB) after 'The Biriyani Mission., In an effort to support some of the 82.4 million people currently di%placed globally (UNHCR), RBB became a registered charity on 19th May 2()20 and aims to support vulnerable people worldwide, including but not limited to: ViLtims of Wdr Oppression Political Persecution Poverty Natural Disaster Retugee% and Asylum Seekers Displaced People The Homele.ss Who We Are A female and community-led project. Core te(Im member%, ¢idvisors dnd ¢imb(1%sadors trom all bdLkgrvund%, inLludingi thosc with lived experience of the migratory pathway & from black, asian, minority and cihnic communilics. A field team consisting of 85f/c people from the refugee and asylum seeking community, currently representing Syria, Iraq, AfghStan, Somalia, Gambia, Ethio ia. Palestine and Yemen. Page 6
WHERE WE ARE Since September 2015, RBB has been involved in providing humiinitarian assistance to displaced people residing in refugee and IDP camps, squats and other unstable settlements along the migratory pathway at the following locations: France: Calais, Dunkirk & Pdris Greece: Idomeni Camp, Thessaloniki, Athens, Lavrio, Samos & Chios Northern Iraq: Duhok Serbia: Belgrade Barracks Bosnia & Herzegovinii - Croati<i Border: Vucjak Camp Turkey: Istanbul Poland, Belarus & Lithuania Border Ukr¢iine Burder This annual report highlight5 our activities in the second year as a registered charity. It shares where our funds come from and the difference it is making in the lives of those we are supporting. There will be insights from the RBB Family and our community as we try to do our part in accompanying and supporting people during a humanitarian crisis. Page 7
WHAT WE DO This year, we expanded our operations to Athens, whilst continuing to support primarily people who are di%placed on the Greek Island of Chios. In November 2021, we also travelled to the borders of Poland, Belarus and Lithuania to a%sess the situation for thousands of people stuck at the border Ihere, to provide humanitarian aid, and to raise awareness, In March 2022, we continued our emergency response and travelled to the Polish- Ukrainian border to assist those aff.ected by the war in Ukraine. We assess needs and communicate with affected populations as well as colleagues on the ground to identi t'y priority gap% in humanitarian care. We specialise in equitable and digiiified Inass aid distributions of food items and non-food items. To achieve these, we have been able to develop sy%terns that adapt to the different crisis zones we operate in, where the needs <ind dynamics can vary greatly. Food Insecurity Case Study l Quote: "My brothers and I collecl cardboardfrom frash in the streets of Aihens and we sell itfor around I15 Euros after working eight hours. There are eightpeople in ourfamily and we have lo do this otherwise ourfamily will go hungry." Yusuf is 12 years oLlfroni Afghanisidn. Page 8
As well as population wide distributions, we also have an individual, person-centred care approach. We implement our humanitarian efforts after liaising closely with those we work with and for, always ensuring continuity and building deep trust. As such, our support over the past year has ranged from supporting funerals for those who have sadly died on the island, supporting the community with transportation. assisting with funeral arrangements following boat capsizes, distributing face masks and hand sanitiser as part of an urgent COVID-19 response, and providing Sleeping bags and basic necessities to those released from quarantine to Vial Camp, Chios. Our advocacy efforts include campaigning for huinan rights and against the violations faced by those we are supporting. By speaking out, we aim to create positive Social changes within the world we live in, intluencing the general public, lobbying politician% and other key decision-makers. Food is one uf Ihe mo%t requesled dnd urgenily needed did item by thu4e displaLed in Greece ¢ind therefore, R1313 s kioud Security with Dignity Project ha% been our primary focus. RBB Helplfine Example Dlstress Messgdges Recelved ly4 4tr4enwow. dw. 0M•d*V1 ro•d W>.rn4ytsod yolKIFVJ yrMottGI Ih?fwrtiynoi ¥5rKA 9otsd somÈtlrnes does not •id REFUGEE Page 9
STRUCTURE & GOVERNANCE During this year, RBB has been governed by five charity trustee.s each in place for the full term. Our constitution provides for a minimum of three trustees. New trustees can be appointed by existing tru.8tees and can serve for three year.s and any charity trustee is eligible for reappointment. Food Insecurity C&se Study 2 Quote: Upon appointment, trustee% ot"t'er their experiise and time freely. No trustee reccived any remuneration during thi period. Trustees met via video call over the previous year as indicated by our con%titutinn. Face to face iiieetings were not possible due to Coronavirus pandemic and for safety measures. All meetings were chaired and minutes recorded by the trustees. In between meetings, trustees Lommunicate regularly using email, What%App and Facebook Messenger to keep each other up to date on projects and to approve or decline projects (ind expenditures. "l eannol receivefood a,$ I received refugee .Ylalus 111 2019. Tlieffond.¥erved lil camp l.f liiedlble, however. I wail at Élle end of tllef0t liiie to .see if there is any bread and water lefl, tliat Ihey might glve us. 95Q/¢ Of (he lime after walllng iwo huurs, there nnne left. I then have no cholce hut to gn aiid beg ollier people to Kee if Ihey cali .Ipare me some of ihe what they received., l.iving in a tent in Vial Camp, a 21.year-old.fingle iiiuii frotti YL'iiieii IJ uiiuble lu work, due lu Ilie poorjob inarket aiid thefact his Greek ID lias expired. Our high-level strategy and areas of activity are reviewed on an ongoing basis due to the fast-changing nature of the crisis for displaced people and sudden emergencie.s requiring a flexible and needs- based approach. Page 10
CHAIRPERSON & FOUNDER'S STATEMENT L( l am proud to introduce the Refugee Biriyani & Bananas April 2021 March 2022 annual accounts on behalf of our team. In spite of ongoing challenges this year, we continued to work towards our goals to advocate for and support the people within our popul<ition of Ciire. The people we are supporting in Greece (our ba%e) h(Ive arrived from countrie.s such as Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, Palestine, Yemen, Pakistan as well as East, West and Sub-S¢ih<if¢in Africa (Cameroon, Gh¢ina, Nigeria, Congyo, Eriirea, Eihiopia, Sud(in, and Somalia). For a lic rge P<lrt of this fin¢incial year, we were subject to restrictions due to Covid- I C) pandemic and theretore had to adapt our efforts around this. The people we were supporting also struggled. Already re,siding in a precarious environment, lockdown Ineant they were further unable to readily access basic life resources or support from NGOS. As people left Chios Island and those able to be registered upon arrival reduced, we identified capacity to support on the mainland in Athens. We al.so travelled to the borders of Poland, Belarus and Lithuania border and continued to support these sites remotely directing volunteers. aid and other resources to those on the ground. Pagell
Towards the end of the year we decided to focus on strengthening our Board of Trustees as well as planning to appoint our first salaried employee. This growth and development phase of RBB aims to: Improve aid provision and the effectiveness of our advocacy and social awareness effort Execute a long-terni, sustainable, organisational model with high staff wellbeing, improved governance, reporting, accountability, policies, safeguarding and operational procedure%. During this year our key projects were: The Brothers Campaign - Providing support and advocating for displaced males who are %ingle and from family units, someiime4 neglected in aid work. Food security and nutrition with dignity. The Prison Run - Supporting and advocating for asylum seeker% who are in detention or receiiily released froin deteiiiion. Additional support for people whose governmental allowances have been cut after receiving refugee st<itus or a second rejection on their asylum application. Suppoit during crises includiiig fires in cainp and extreme weather. Advocacy efforts in relation to pushbacks, criminalisation of aid workers, criminalisation of people on ihe move, food insecurity and reception and identif'ication centre conditions, None of this would have been possible without the Lontinued trust and support of our p(irtners and donors, to whom I would like to extend my gr(ititude. Additionally, I would like to take this opportunity to thank the RBB team for their commitment and resilience and most importiintly, on behalf of RBB, I would like to thank the community we (ire Supporting tor trusting us and allowing us to be p(lrt ot their journey and accompanying us in all that we do. We pledge to continue and improve our efforts in the upcoming year. RuhR Akhtar Chairper.%nn Page 12
KEY ACHIEVEMENTS Thank you to everyone who donated to us, raised funds for us, volunteered with us remotely or in the field, sent us aid, shared our social media posts and gave us the encouragement to keep going. Special THANKS to all those from the asylum-seeking community who volunteered with us despite being in a difficult 8iiuation them%elves. A comprehensive financial overview is included after this section in the Accountants Independent Examination. Together we were able to support approximately l 0,000 people over all sites, with some people receiving ongoing care where appropriate and others as a one time if they wei"e on the move. Here are Some of our key achievement and example% of the difference we were able to make with your monetary and material donations combined: FOOD SECURITY WITH DIGNITY Iijllll -rF- I We purchased £93,696.28 of Food Supplies and £5,401 of Hygiene Products for Monthly Distributions in Chios Page 13
In total 16,979 Food & Hygiene Pack8 were distributed. The average number of items per pack was 14 products, with Ihe range being between 5 items and 22 items per pack. The provision of <iid items is decided Lifter litiising with the community of support. The packs include nutrient-dense and long-lasting staple foodstuffs, as well as specially cho.sen items by the people themselves, such as Pepsi (a hot favourite !) and dates (POPLilar in Middle Eastern and South Asian cultures). Although the followiiig table is not exhaustive of all food and hygiene producL Ivithin the year, it gives an inslght into some of the popular items and quantities distributed, only posslble wfith your support. Item Individual Unit Siy,e Total Distributed Sunflower Oil l Litre 12,228 Bottles Bu¢im#tl Rlce IKG 9,8 Packs Milk l Litre 7,776 Cartons Pulses and Ileans IKG 8.867 Tins Pepsi 1.5 Litre 2,498 Rlottles Box of v.ggs 6 Eggs IU,566 Eggs Frufit and Vegetables Pack 4KG 4.6 Tonnes Mixed I'inned Tomatoes 4.$0 Grams 111,058 Tins Tinned Tuna I Sardines 150 Ciram5 9554 Tin.5 Datos IKG 7,423 Packs Dishwashing Liquid 0.75 Litres 1,231 Bottles Clothes Washing Powder 500 Grams 3J38 Boxes Reusable Face Masks I Piece 35,000 NIasks Page 14
Recent feedback received after a food distribution 21:24 4 replied lo IheThtll This is a natural orange juice f rom the orange in the food package Beautiful and speryal dlnner today after the rest of my caravan frlends recelved the food parcel A lovely message from a resident of Vial Camp leaving Chios Okay but I'm the one that supposed to say thanks to you guys for everything you have done for us here, since I come you guys helped us great (• I really appreciate thanks once again. 15:35 Page 15
OTHER KEY ACHIEVEMENTS Wc %uppnrtcd ihc funer1( I scrvicc4 of 5 pcoplc. Onc wnman and Iwo childrcn sadly dicd as their boat capsi2cd upon iiri'iviiig lo Lhios. Onc ()Iher Inan Kind womiin passed dWKly whil%1 in Ihc i15ylum scckiiig pr()ces% ii) Lhio%. Wilh donaicd fuiids wc boughi flowcn%. whitL cloih. iowLls. h411)d saiiitiser iiiid w(Iier cai)iiistci'% so th(ii Ihe community could hold thcir culiurc-appropricltc funcriil rviCe. Wc iilso tran%porlcd cornmunily mcmbcrs from Ihc clmp to allend. DHAKA MAPKET (20 DHAKA MAPKE T 70 l*/ £.3,962.97 w()rth ()f 4hi)pping v()ucher% were di%trihiited to tamilie% and individucils in Athens. l.unch items and refres1111)eiil% weir pri)vided willi eaLli i)I' Ihe%e dislribulii)11s f()i- reLlI)ieiil%. 1097 Backpacks and 307 Suitcases (small. medium and large sizes) were provided to over 20(Kl people leaving the island to casc ihcir travcl.s and to slorc thcir belongings whilst living in Vial Camp. Page 16
WHLU 4030g 282 baby p(Ick% werc di%tributcd con%i%ling of first %l(Igc %olid baby tood. Fch pack cont4iincd 60 portion% of 400g of baby lui)d which wa4 IWC) purlion% per (Idy tc)r Ihe entire n)unth per baby. The nuinb¢r4 c)l- b&ibi&4 %upwrted each m()nih varied however ai rn()s1 we pr()vided f(Ir 63 biibies in i)ne mi)nlh. With Ihc baby food wc al80 providcd instruction cards. storagc boxcs to prolcct the ilcms trom snakcs and ruts, baby p()on% and dlso heavy duly i'euiable t() %upp()rt parent% 41()ra&ie cc)nLem% citlen nee(linbi extr<1 l()r inl'dnl4. We volunteered at ihe Poland, B¢laru5 and Lithuania border and bought emergency Supplies for people forced to spend the night in the torest in frozen condition. This included extreme cold weaiher suitable sleeping bags, medical aid, food. waler. backpacks. power b<1nks, winter clothing. thermal wear and insulation blankets. Page 17
,Iiiiillll Illl In re%rx)n%e to the W&ir in Ukriiine. we went to w Jnd then the Pnl i%h border poin1% ot RIlW£i Rii%ka-Hehrenne. ML(lykii. Us11'7.yki l)oliiL 1£ 1)d IliL a%.s(KiatLd I'LI'ugLL reLLI)linii LLiIII'L% 11) IIIL.se alL<lS. WL II)Lll voluiilLLfLd ill SIILliyni in Ukriiin¢ wl)¢'rL we 4uppi)rl¢d loLal volunl¢Lr4 wilh Ii'4in%puriiilicin li)r pLuplL tleLingi Ihe war and Mubhi Jnd collected 15 pallet4 worth ot. aid which was tran%porlcd dcro%4 Ihc border by volunteers on tool by Irollcy. We al%0 helped org¢illi%iilions Ihcie willi di%ii'ihiilinns and W1rehOl1.c InkinlgCmenI. Page 18
FINANCIAL OVERVIEW This ye(Ir, we've been (Ible lo inLrea5e our 5UPPUrt fL)r ihe d%ylum-seekin&i Lommuniiy in GreeLe £tnd further dfield Ih&ink% lo the %upp()rl frc)In hundred% of individuiil% well ils froin f(iundalion%. Here 1.% (In overview of our findllcidl income dnd expenditure. A full report on our funds is dl'dildble d5 Pdrt of the Independent Exdmilldtion. Online Fundraising 19.1% Where our funds came from Individual Donation5 Grants 71.2% Organisational Cosis 4.1% Aid Logistics 15.3% Hoiv we spent our funds Direct Aid 80.6% £ioo,ooo È75,000 Where we spent our funds £50,000 E25.000 £0 Greece Ukraine Belarus and Border 2020- 2021 2021 2n22 Income £119,277 £210,951 In perspective Expenditure £105,590 £136,944
Independent examiner's report on the accounts
| Section A Independent Examiner’s Report |
Section A Independent Examiner’s Report |
|---|---|
| Report to the trustees/ members of On accounts for the year ended Set out on pages Responsibilities and basis of report Independent examiner's statement |
Charity Name Refugee Biriyani and Bananas CIO 31/03/2022 Charity no (if any) 1189561 3-4 I report to the trustees on my examination of the accounts of the above charity (“the Trust”) for the year ended31/03/2022. As the charity's trustees, you are responsible for the preparation of the accounts in accordance with the requirements of the Charities Act 2011 (“the Act”). I report in respect of my examination of the Trust’s accounts carried out under section 145 of the 2011 Act and in carrying out my examination, I have followed all the applicable Directions given by the Charity Commission under section 145(5)(b) of the Act. I have completed my examination. I confirm that no material matters have come to my attention in connection with the examination (other than that disclosed below *) which gives me cause to believe that in, any material respect: • the accounting records were not kept in accordance with section 130 of the Charities Act; or • the accounts did not accord with the accounting records; or • the accounts did not comply with the applicable requirements concerning the form and content of accounts set out in the Charities (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008 other than any requirement that the accounts give a ‘true and fair’ view which is not a matter considered as part of an independent examination. |
I have no concerns and have come across no other matters in connection with the examination to which attention should be drawn in this report in order to enable a proper understanding of the accounts to be reached.
- Please delete the words in the brackets if they do not apply.
| Signed: Name: Relevant professional qualification(s) or body (if any): Address: |
10/11/2022 | |
|---|---|---|
| Amsel Page von Spreckelsen | ||
| CIMA DipMA | ||
| 92 Melbourne Road, Eastbourne BN22 8BA | ||
Page 1 of 4
Section B
Disclosure
Only complete if the examiner needs to highlight material matters of concern (see CC32, Independent examination of charity accounts: directions and guidance for examiners).
Give here brief details of any items that the examiner wishes to disclose .
Page 2 of 4
| Refugee Biriyani and Bananas CIO Charity Name |
Refugee Biriyani and Bananas CIO Charity Name |
Refugee Biriyani and Bananas CIO Charity Name |
1189561 No (if any) |
1189561 No (if any) |
1189561 No (if any) |
CC16a | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| For the period from |
01/04/2021 Period start date |
To | 31/03/2022 Period end date |
||||
| Section A Receipts and payments | |||||||
| A1 Receipts | Unrestricted funds to the nearest £ 51,275 19,457 37,660 2,898 - - - - 111,290 - - - 111,290 22,786 3,616 3,492 9,898 5,205 - - - - 44,996 684 - 684 45,680 65,610 - 10,465 76,075 |
Restricted funds to the nearest £ 97,911 971 - 780 - - - - 99,661 - - - 99,661 87,942 391 - 3,615 - - - - - 91,948 - - - 91,948 7,713 - 2,597 10,310 |
Endowment funds to the nearest £ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
Total funds to the nearest £ 149,186 20,427 37,660 3,678 - - - - 210,951 - - - 210,951 110,728 4,006 3,492 13,513 5,205 - - - - 136,944 684 - 684 137,628 73,323 |
Last year to the nearest £ |
||
| Grants | 51,275 | 39,210 | |||||
| Individual Donations | 19,457 | 9,600 | |||||
| Online Fundraising | 37,660 | 70,467 | |||||
| Individuals Fundraisingfor RBB | 2,898 | - | |||||
| - | - | ||||||
| - | - | ||||||
| - | - | ||||||
| - | - | ||||||
| Sub total(Gross income for AR) |
111,290 | 119,277 | |||||
| A2 Asset and investment sales, (see table). |
|||||||
| - | |||||||
| - | - | ||||||
| Sub total | - | - | |||||
| Total receipts A3 Payments |
|||||||
| 119,277 | |||||||
| Aid - Direct Costs | 22,786 | 78,036 | |||||
| Freight, Transportation & Fuel Costs | 3,616 | 9,209 | |||||
| Storage & Warehousing | 3,492 | 4,929 | |||||
| Team Expenses - Travel, Accomodation and Stipends |
9,898 | 8,733 | |||||
| Overheads and Administration | 5,205 | 4,683 | |||||
| - | - | ||||||
| - | - | ||||||
| - | - | ||||||
| - | - | ||||||
| Sub total | 44,996 | 105,590 | |||||
| A4 Asset and investment purchases, (see table) |
|||||||
| Computer Equipment | 684 | 625 | |||||
| - | |||||||
| Sub total | 684 | 625 | |||||
| Total payments Net of receipts/(payments) A5 Transfers between funds A6 Cash funds last year end Cash funds this year end |
0 | ||||||
| 106,215 | |||||||
| 65,610 | 7,713 | - | 73,323 | 13,062 | |||
| - | - | - | - | - | |||
| 10,465 | 2,597 | - | 13,062 | - | |||
| 76,075 | 10,310 | - | 86,385 | 13,062 |
Page 3 of 4
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 B5 Liabilities B3 Investment assets B2 Other monetary assets B4 Assets retained for the charity’s own use B1 Cash funds |
Details Details VIS INT'L 0065323769 ~~AMAZON CO UK~~~~EZ2KH AMAZON CO UK~~ ASUS VivoBook M513UA Details Total cash funds (agree balances with receipts and payments account(s)) Details Co-Operative Current Account Details* Signature Independent Examination Fee Thomas John Snape (Nov 10, 2022 17:55 GMT) |
Unrestricted funds Restricted funds to nearest £ to nearest £ 76,075 10,310 - - - - 76,075 10,310 OK OK Unrestricted funds Restricted funds to nearest £ to nearest £ - - - - - - - - - - - - Fund to which asset belongs Cost (optional) - - - - - Fund to which asset belongs Cost (optional) 286 684 - - - - - Fund to which liability relates Amount due (optional) 600 - - - - Print Name Thomas John Snape Jacob Warn |
Endowment funds to nearest £ |
|---|---|---|---|
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| OK | |||
| Endowment funds to nearest £ |
|||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| Current value (optional) |
|||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| Current value (optional) |
|||
| 191 | |||
| 551 | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| - | |||
| When due (optional) | |||
| 01 November 2022 | |||
| Date of approval | |||
| Thomas John Snape (Nov 10, 2022 17:55 GMT) | Thomas John Snape | Nov 10, 2022 | |
| Jacob Warn | Nov 10,2022 |
Page 4 of 4
Independent_Examiners Report and Accounts RBB
Final Audit Report
2022-11-10
Created: 2022-11-10 By: Amsel von Spreckelsen (amsel@bcfconsulting.co.uk) Status: Signed Transaction ID: CBJCHBCAABAAUqTj0WKo1_ut2dSqJ2NUw9pFQAzOV7fb
"Independent_Examiners Report and Accounts RBB" History
Document created by Amsel von Spreckelsen (amsel@bcfconsulting.co.uk)
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Agreement completed.
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