The primary liquidator’s report on a charitable belief linked to Brian Tamaki’s Future Church exhibits $2,397,331.94 is owed to unsecured collectors together with Inland Income and Kiwi Fuelcards.
The only real trustee of Whakamana Worldwide Belief, which modified its identify from Future Worldwide Belief in August, is Tamaki’s assistant Jennifer Marshall.
Causes given for liquidation are listed as “disputes with Inland Income” and related entities are recorded as Te Hahi O Nga Matamua Holdings Restricted, which was positioned into liquidation owing $2.7 million following an software by the tax division on November 7.
The mixed debt of the 2 entities is $5,078,479.66
The official assignee has been appointed as liquidator.
The abstract of belongings lists the steadiness of money within the financial institution accounts held by Whakamana Worldwide Belief as $13,118.12.
A abstract of liabilities says there are not any recognized secured collectors, whereas $2,397,331.94 is owed to unsecured collectors.
Inland Income, Westpac Financial institution, Kiwi Gas Playing cards Restricted and GCo Fuels are listed as recognized and potential unsecured collectors.
“The Charitable Belief was registered as a Charitable Belief on 12 February 2001 beneath the identify Future Worldwide Belief however modified its identify to Whakamana Worldwide Belief on 29 August 2025,” the report reads.
“The Charitable Belief was registered on the charities register in June 2008 however was then subsequently deregistered in December 2017 and once more in February 2022. The liquidator has made preliminary contact with the Trustee who suggested that the Charitable Belief was not buying and selling on the date of liquidation.
“The Trustee is at present helping the liquidator with their enquiries into the monetary affairs of the Charitable Belief. The Trustee has been despatched an announcement of affairs for the Charitable Belief to finish.
“The Charitable Belief financial institution accounts have been closed with surplus funds despatched to the liquidator.
“The liquidator will full an investigation into the monetary affairs of the Charitable Belief to establish any remaining belongings/different recoveries of the Charitable Belief for the good thing about collectors.”
When requested for touch upon the liquidation of Future Church-related entity Te Hahi O Nga Matamua Holdings Restricted, Marshall advised Newsroom the quantity “doesn’t sound correct”.
“That entity hasn’t been working for fairly a while, so it doesn’t have any belongings. I don’t know fairly what that refers to.”
The buying and selling deal with for the belief is listed as 25 Druces Street, Wiri, Auckland – the three-hectare website the place Future Church had based mostly itself since 2014 – although as Newsroom reported earlier this month, the church moved out of its premises after its lease ended initially of December.
Marshall earlier confirmed the church doesn’t but have a brand new location and that providers are actually being held at Due Drop Occasions Centre.
“We’re simply renting venues in the mean time till we discover a appropriate location. It’s fairly typical of church buildings that they’ll rent venues. We’ll reassess it within the new yr.”
Future has usually made headlines lately, most not too long ago over the weekend when protesters linked to Brian Tamaki and his church disrupted a Sikh parade in South Auckland.
A video posted to Tamaki’s social media pages exhibits True Patriots of NZ confront the Sikh group as they’re strolling down a road, with police separating each side.
The True Patriots group then performs a haka earlier than linking arms and chanting, whereas being stored other than the Sikh group by police.
The caption of Tamaki’s video says: “THIS IS OUR LAND. THIS IS OUR STAND.”
“Right now, True Patriots stood their floor in South Auckland.
“No violence. No riots.
“Simply my younger males performing a haka … face-to-face … to ship a transparent message:
“KEEP NZ, NZ.”
















