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Destiny Church faces call to lose charity status over Pride protest

Author
RNZ ,
Publish Date
Fri, 21 Feb 2025, 3:28pm

Destiny Church faces call to lose charity status over Pride protest

Author
RNZ ,
Publish Date
Fri, 21 Feb 2025, 3:28pm

By Susan Edmunds of 

Te Atat奴 MP has written to the charities regulator asking for Destiny Church to be struck off.

About 30 adults and young children had to be barricaded into a room in a library in West Auckland last weekend when a group linked to .

Twyford鈥檚 formal complaint to alleges the church engaged in wrongdoing.

鈥淒estiny鈥檚 actions were certainly oppressive, which meets the definition of wrongdoing in the law, and so they should lose their tax deductible status,鈥 he said.

鈥淒estiny is in breach of the . This organisation should not be receiving a cent of public subsidy through tax deductibility nor the stamp of approval that registration as a charity implies.鈥

Comment has been requested from .

Meanwhile, charities are required to file an annual return each year, which is published on the Charities Register.

But has not had any returns published since 2022.

Its regional branches have published theirs. in February submitted that it had total income of $226,679 in the most recent financial year, and expenditure of $232,534.

filed a return last year indicating it had income of $667,086 and expenditure of $660,171. Tauranga had income of $294,777 and expenditure of $272,249 and Whakatane $595,322 in income and $563,794 in expenditure.

Charlotte Stanley, director of Charities Services, said filing annual reports was an important legal obligation for all registered charities.

Labour MP Phil Twyford. Photo / Mark MitchellLabour MP Phil Twyford. Photo / Mark Mitchell

鈥淲e take failure to file these reports seriously, if an entity does not report for two consecutive years, they may be removed from the register.

鈥淗owever, if an entity has filed their annual report but has outstanding actions, it is considered incomplete and will not appear on the public register until the outstanding action is rectified.

鈥淲e can confirm that have filed annual reports post 2022 but currently have outstanding actions they need to address. In order to prioritise transparency for the public we are actively reviewing whether reports can be published for entities with outstanding actions.鈥

It is understood those actions relate to annual filing fees.

- RNZ

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