FIRS Certifies Donations To Ex- Finance Minister’s Charity As Tax Deductible

The Federal Inland Revenue Service has certified corporate organisations’ donations to former Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun’s charity, DashMe Foundation, as Tax Deductible.

The government’s revenue agency has consequently issued a tax-deductible donations certificate to DashMe Foundation. The certificate was issued to the Foundation last week Thursday in Abuja.

Advertisement

DashMe, a Lagos-based charity with operations in Nigeria, the United States and the United Kingdom, was founded by former finance minister, Kemi Adeosun, in June 2021.

The FIRS issues tax-deductible donation certificates to carefully vetted registered charities whose operations meet Nigeria’s statutory ‘public character’ requirements.

Section 25(c) of the Companies Income Tax Act (CITA) permits companies which make charitable donations to charities with tax-deductible donations certificates to a ‘donation relief’.

The donation relief provision is aimed at encouraging corporate bodies in Nigeria to channel their Corporate Social Responsibilities (CSR) donations to carefully-vetted non-governmental bodies, associations and institutions engaged in life-changing, socially-relevant projects.

Advertisement

In a statement on Sunday, the DashMe Foundation said corporate organisations that donate to it will now enjoy donation relief under its new status, which is an allowance to deduct their donations from their taxable profits.

The former Finance Minister expressed her delight at the FIRS’s tax-deductible donations certificate to DashMe Foundation.

Reacting on the development, Adeosun noted that the issuance of the certificate by the country’s foremost tax body is a recognition of the charity’s strides in the past year and its commitment to changing the lives of vulnerable Nigerians.

Adeosun, who recalled that DashMe was recently granted a similar certificate in the United States, added that the approval would energise the charity’s drive to obtain the same tax-exempt status in the UK.

She said, “I am delighted that FIRS has recognized DashMe Foundation as being worthy of this rare status. We believe that more corporate bodies will be incentivised to donate to us now that they know that their donations will be fully tax deductible.

Advertisement

“The certificate will significantly enhance our capacity to raise more funds from the corporate sector and also enhance our ability to initiate more life-changing projects for Nigeria’s most vulnerable children, women and other disempowered groups.”

The interim Chief Executive Officer of the organisation, Tomisin Akinwunmi, also expressed excitement at the funding possibilities that the charity’s new status offers.

“We are thrilled by this development. Our projects are making a huge difference in the lives of people and this certification will encourage us and our partners to do more.

“We are thankful to the FIRS for providing us with an opportunity to raise funds at a scale that would enhance our ability to reach more Nigerians,” Akinwunmi said.

Akinwunmi said the Foundation had raised over N200m in the past year, through its thrift shops, corporate donations drives and snacks business.

It has also undertaken projects in Borno, Cross River, Imo, Kano, Lagos Nasarawa, Niger, Ogun and Osun States.

Advertisement

She added that the Foundation planned to extend its operations to all parts of the country by year-end 2023.

The Foundation’s current projects include orphanage building projects in Imo and Ogun states, sponsorship of orphans in universities, provision of prosthetic limbs and start-up capital for amputees, as well as regular food donations to several orphanages and IDP camps.

DashMe, a Lagos-based charity with operations in Nigeria, the United States and the United Kingdom, was founded by Adeosun in June 2021.

The vision of Dash Me is to raise funds from within Nigeria and her diaspora community to change the lives of Nigeria’s most disempowered persons through projects that seek to improve the lot of orphaned children, women and underprivileged groups.

ENDS

Leave a comment

Advertisement