appendix ii- letter to africa centre stakeholders 180311

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    Memorandum 18 March 2011

    To Open letter to Africa Centre stakeholders:

    From Boko Inyundo, Trustee, Africa Centre

    Mobile

    Email

    0044 7779 299 105

    [email protected]

    To whom it may concern,

    Re: Plans confirmed by the Africa Centres Board to sell this charitable trusts 38 King Street,

    Covent Garden (London), building

    This memorandum is written for the attention of any party with an interest in ensuring that the current

    Board of the Africa Centre (London) executes its duties in the right and proper manner as it now

    formally and actively seeks to sell the leasehold to the much loved and only physical asset of this

    charitable trust, its 38 King Street headquarters in Covent Garden, London.

    For context I am a Trustee of this charity and am deeply concerned with the manner in which this

    decision has been / is being taken, rather than the decision to sell per se. This concern became

    concrete during a Council of Management meeting that I attended on 16 March 2011 when OliverTunde Andrews, in his capacity as chairman of the Africa Centre, explicitly confirmed that the current

    Board had now decided to sell the leasehold. This confirmation was passionately supported by the

    new deputy chairperson, Bimpe Nkontchou, a lawyer who has committed much time to providing the

    legal framework to enable the proposed sale to happen, though her and the collective core team

    actively driving the sale has seemingly spent a lot less time articulating whether any alternative path

    offers a self-sustainable future for the trust.

    Since I became a Board member over three years ago I have always been an advocate of ensuring

    that the future of this charity is truly sustainable. I take this step of writing this open letter as I do not

    believe that the current Board has adequately explored the sustainability of any scenario in which this

    charitable trust does not wholly own its 38 King Street property. A core group of Trustees have devotedmuch time to discussions with a single property developer, Capital and Counties (CapCo), about the

    fair value of the property, however, that group have not, as yet, articulated what it may do with the

    largesse the trust receives from this sale and there has been no rigorous exploration of whether any

    such route offers a truly sustainable path and the optimal likelihood of this cherished, over 40 year old,

    institution prospering for many decades to come.

    This memorandum follows a formal, written, enquiry that I sent Oliver Tunde Andrews, chairman of the

    Africa Centre, on 20 February 2011 in which I expressed my heightened concerns with the process

    gearing the trusteeship towards agreeing the sale. This process has appeared to me to be an effort by

    a core group of Trustees to rail-road the option of sale through the current Board without the

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    necessary rigour required to investigate whatever plan B offered in terms of sustainability and

    whether any such plan met the purpose of the trust as enshrined in its constitution.

    It is perhaps notable that, when I probed the trustees that attended the 16 March 2011 Council

    meeting on whether they had sufficient information to convince them that the sale was the most

    appropriate option to take forward, one trustee, Wayne Callender, confessed that he simply wants toexecute the sale so he could spend the time, that he otherwise commits to Africa Centre matters,

    towards perfecting his golf game! Bimpe Nkontchou also admitted, without my soliciting this

    information, that she had had to perform the due diligence on CapCos offer more or less all by

    herself as Oliver Tunde Andrews and the other proponents of sale on the Board were out of the

    country or busy. Note that Oliver Tunde Andrews is now permanently based in Nigeria and has called

    only circa 3 or 4 Board meetings in the past 2 years in London as his own logistics and professional

    commitments have served to compromise his ability to execute his duties as chairman, duties that

    would undoubtedly be more effectively performed in situ in the UK. Furthermore, as one trustee,

    Godson Egbo, observed during the 16 March 2011 meeting, he has not met, or even heard from,

    many of the circa 20 trustees since he joined the Board some 2 years ago. This comment regarding

    absenteeism of Board members was made when agreeing with issues that I raised regarding

    governance at the Africa Centre to date and whether the highly questionable structure and governance

    of the charity adequately lent itself to any consensual and proper decision making, especially in a

    circumstance such as this where such a significant resolution is being sought.

    I mention these three anecdotes to highlight how I believe this most momentous decision in the

    lifecycle of the Africa Centre is being made in entirely the wrong governance context. It is my belief

    that several of the current trustees have experienced mission drift in relation to the purpose of this

    charitable trust and are simply rubber-stamping the option to sell as they believe, once enacted, this

    will give them a window of opportunity to walk away from their longer term responsibilities as trustees.

    This deepens my concern as there is the serious likelihood that, post any contractual agreement with

    a property developer to sell, this current Board may well absolve themselves of the responsibility tothen wisely use the financial capital gained in order to meet the trusts constitutional purpose. Whoever

    would then take on this responsibility would almost certainly be left in a thoroughly exposed situation

    without any legal recourse to reviewing the terms of sale agreed prior to that point in time.

    I hereby summarise discussions at the Council of Management meeting on 16 March 2011 so as to set

    out where the Africa Centre is currently at with regards to key aspects for consideration in engaging

    with the sale of the property.

    1 Where are we now?

    1.1 Bimpe Nkontchou believes that, in her capacity as a solicitor, she has performed adequate due

    diligence on the terms of sale

    1.2 Legal advisory support has been provided by the Africa Centres existing legal counsel at

    Bates Wells & Braithwaite solicitors, a Nick Ivey, Partner and Head of Property

    1.3 Draft head of terms for the sale of 38 King Street include:

    1.3.1 The Africa Centre is to enter into a transaction with Capital and Counties (CapCo) that

    is to enable them to pursue planning consent for the property at their own cost and

    risk, subject to the grant and exercise of an option for a 125 year lease and a short

    term lease back to the charity to allow for its relocation. On the grant of the Option, the

    parties shall enter into and Agreement for the Head Lease and a Leaseback

    conditional upon exercise of the Option.

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    1.3.2 Option period up to an including 31 December 2011 subject to the right by the Tenant

    (CapCo) to determine prior to end

    1.3.3 Option price - 200,000 (plus VAT if applicable)

    1.3.4 Option notice written notice exercising the Option in accordance with the terms of the

    Agreement and being not less than 21 days, such notice to be served at any time

    during the Option Period

    1.3.5 Option terms

    (i) on expiry of the Option Notice period the following will take place: Exchange of

    the Sale & Purchase Contract and payment of 10% of the premium of 10.5

    million (less the Option Price) (plus VAT if applicable)

    (ii) Existing tenants of 38 King Street to be served with notice to quit (if not already

    done so) and CapCo to pay a further 40% of the premium of 10.5 million upon

    receipt of written confirmation that said tenancies have been terminated and

    said tenants have given up possession

    (iii) On completion and upon giving vacant possession to CapCo, a lease for a term

    of 125 years shall be granted to the CapCo on the terms and conditions as set

    out in Schedule 1 and the balance of 50% of the premium of 10.5 million to be

    paid; and

    (iv) A leaseback of nine months from the date of completion shall be granted to the

    Landlord on the terms and conditions set out in Schedule 2

    1.4 Michael Greensmith of Stanley Hicks Chartered Surveyors appeared to have been invited by

    Oliver Tunde Andrews and Bimpe Nkotchou to attend the Council of Management meeting on

    16 March 2011. His attendance was appreciated and, although it transpired that he is yet tocomplete a survey of 38 King Street (this is expected later in March 2011), he offered his initial

    opinions on the draft heads of terms and on the issue of disposing of land/assets by charitable

    trusts, with specific reference to the Charities Act 1993 and, in particular, key points in section

    36 of this Act. Michael Greensmith spoke generally and with reference to legal advice provided

    in writing by Bates Wells & Braithwaite which included interpretation of section 36. This advice

    broadly stated that:

    1.4.1 Technically, granting an option to buy the freehold or, as in this case, a lease is not in

    itself a disposal. However, granting such an option is a binding commitment to make a

    disposal if and when the buyer exercises the option, at which point it would be too late

    to meet the requirements of section 36. Therefore the requirements of section 36 mustbe met before the option is granted.

    1.4.2 Section 36 has two main purposes. The first purpose is to make sure that there are no

    circumstances that require the charity to get the consent of the Charity Commission to

    the disposal. The Commissions consent will be required if:

    (i) The disposal price is less than open market value; or

    (ii) The disposal is to a person or company that is connected to the charity

    1.4.3 The second purpose of section 36 is to make sure that the charitys trustees have

    followed a proper process to ensure that the charity is getting the best price and terms

    it reasonably can for the disposal of its land. This involves the trustees obtaining and

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    considering and appropriate surveyors report before entering into any commitment

    whether by way of a contract or an option to dispose, and publicly advertising the

    proposed disposal unless the surveyor advises not to do so

    1.5 Current cash-flow status of the Africa Centre

    1.5.1 Trustee, Mark Artivor, probed with Mark Thomas, the Africa Centres Treasurer, where

    the Africa Centre was in relation to cash-flow. Mark Artivor specifically asked what is

    the timeline when the Africa Centre is likely to run out of money under the

    circumstance of its current operation?

    1.5.2 In answer to this question Mark Thomas noted the following:

    (i) 500,000 of the funds secured via recent fundraising (primarily via Arts Council

    England) has been ring fenced and can only be touched by way of a resolution

    with the Council of Management and his own approval as Treasurer

    (ii) Not including the ring fenced 500,000 the trust has circa 80,000 available in

    its current account

    (iii) Monthly loss is now circa 750 per month (whereas this was 3,000 per month

    just a couple of months back, however, Business of Culture have secured full

    tenancy of the building which has helped balance the income and expenditure.

    Oliver Tunde Andrews himself noted that this was a vast improvement from a

    few years ago when he joined when the Africa Centre was losing some

    70,000 per month)

    (iv) On the existing income / spend rate it would be anticipated that the Africa

    Centre would spend approximately 50,000 in the next financial year and it

    would therefore be circa 2 years before the trust ran out of money

    (v) The grant of the Option to sell to CapCo would have an impact on these

    calculations as there would be some things the trust could not do if it decided to

    sell (e.g. tenancy agreements would be cut short impacting revenues, though, if

    the option was exercised this would release an initial non-refundable 200,000

    from CapCo which could be put towards such things as recruiting a fundraising

    director or programming coordinator or other spend linked to the charitys

    constitutional mandate)

    (vi) According to Mark Thomas Arts Council Englands Jonathan Treadway

    (Director of Regular Funding at Arts Council England) has confirmed that Arts

    Council England would not ask for its money back and that the Africa Centrecould spend it on any commitments linked to it meeting its constitutional

    objectives (e.g. the hiring of project directors)

    1.5.3 Business of Culture contractual terms

    (i) The contractual arrangements with Business of Culture were discussed at the

    end of the 16 March 2011 meeting as the direction of travel dictated that this

    would require review

    (ii) It appears that, prior to the meeting, a core group of Trustees that included

    Oliver Tunde Andrews and Mark Thomas, had agreed with Graeme Jennings,

    Director at Business of Culture, that this consultancys s tandard monthly

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    retainer would increase by 10% from 5,000 per month to 5,500 per month. A

    discounted hourly rate would now come into effect at 110 per hour. The Africa

    Centre Board and Business of Culture agreed that the retainer would

    specifically cover 9 days work per month and if the Africa Centres demands

    exceeded this amount this had to be agreed in writing with the Treasurer who

    would seek sanction from the Board. Any discrete consultancy initiatives would

    require Mark Thomas and Oliver Tunde Andrews to agree these. Any third party

    costs such as those for Sheila Ruiz, Susan Odamtten (secretary at 38 King

    Street) and accountants fees would be covered

    2 Summary of my concerns

    2.1 Process

    2.1.1 There has been no formal articulation of what the alternative to 38 King Street is and

    whether it: a) is the most sustainable path to pursue and; b) enables the charity to meet

    its constitutional mandate

    2.1.2 Every time the Trustees gather there are always several possibilities mentioned

    varying from remaining in the existing building and executing some small-scale

    refurbishment (note we had commissioned this to start in December 2010 but Trustees

    called this off without any consensus or formal rationale) to disposing of the property

    and existing as a virtual institution perhaps modelling the charity as an educational

    trust offering bursaries to African children seeking to study in the UK

    2.1.3 However, at no point, has any Trustee or Business of Culture defined what exactly the

    consensus is with regards to the trusts future and where the evidence is to provide

    greater conviction that any alternative route presents a more plausible opportunity to

    sustain the trust

    2.1.4 The latest consideration first muted during the 16 March 2011 meeting was for the

    Africa Centre to co-habit with the Royal Commonwealth Society (RCS), another

    charitable trust focussed on Africa and situated in 18-25 Northumberland Avenue,

    London. It is understood that Bimpe Nkotchou (and other trustees) have had two initial

    meetings with this group to explore such a proposition and indications are that the RCS

    is interested as it could benefit from additional support for its programming and would

    be in a position to provide the Africa Centre with access to its facilities (e.g. catering,

    meeting rooms, website management, office management etc). The RCS is believed to

    be open to rebranding itself as the vestiges of colonialism that their brand has do not

    sit comfortably with the provenance of the more overtly AfricanAfrica Centre. Such aproposition has its pros and its cons and requires time for further investigation by both

    these institutions Boards. Once again, the fact that this option was only introduced in

    the 16 March 2011 Council of Management meeting which was, with hindsight, clearly

    set up to rubber-stamp the decision to sell, provides further evidence of the somewhat

    adhoc, on-the-hoof, nature with which the current Africa Centre Board is considering

    the most critical decision it has faced in its +40 year history and which determines the

    future sustainability of the Africa Centre

    2.2 Best price

    2.2.1 I personally have serious reservations about whether the Africa Centre has secured the

    best price and terms it reasonably can for the disposal of 38 King Street. Although this

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    opinion is, to some degree, subject to the upcoming surveyors report and the currently

    volatile London property market, it is notable that the Africa Centre team leading

    discussions about sale have only talked to a single property developer, in this case

    CapCo, and none of their competitors in this area such as Derwent, to provide one

    example

    2.2.2 The Africa Centre Board has not, and at the 16 March 2011 meeting affirmed that it

    does not intend to, publicly advertise the proposed disposal

    2.2.3 Furthermore, the Africa Centre team involved has not done any due diligence or

    market analysis on the prospect of more confidence returning to the London property

    market over the next 1-2 years (note that a property news article was recently

    circulated to Trustees by Business of Cultures William Tayleur which explicitly noted

    that property prices in the Covent Garden area were anticipated, by independent

    industry analysts, to experience an uptick over the next year or two)

    2.3 Cash-flow the current state of the Africa Centres finances provides the Africa Centre with

    some breathing space as there are sufficient funds in the trust s current account which, if

    managed well, appear to grant the Board in the region of 1-2 years to either: a) outline a plan

    of action to save the existing property and protect the provenance and integrity of this much

    loved site; or b) secure the best price, rather than solely market value, for the building whilst

    also executing proper due diligence and consensual decision-making on any alternative

    scenarios for a future that do not involve outright ownership of 38 King Street

    2.4 Governance

    2.4.1 Issues with absenteeism and, with regards to several Trustees zero input at all,

    represent a significant challenge to this charity operating effectively. The Africa

    Centres governing document (its memorandum and articles of association) makes

    provisions about the maximum length of term of office or removal of trustees if they do

    not attend more than a certain number of meetings without apologies. No such

    mechanism for monitoring individual effectiveness at Board level has been

    implemented. If input to date by a greater than average proportion of Trustees has

    been minimal to non-existent then, from a governance point of view, I strongly question

    whether enough has been done to explore the sustainability of the current premises or

    even whether a best price for the current property has been achieved. I also question

    whether the current system of governance offers the charity much chance of sustaining

    the charity and delivering its charitable objects irrespective of whichever future

    scenario plays out

    2.4.2 This, therefore, raises the fundamental question should a new Board be voted in

    prior to rubber stamping any decision to sell? The aim would be to give that new Board

    a defined period of time to save the Africa Centre within its current premises or chart

    an appropriately robust alternative. There are several young, fresh, enthusiastic,

    aspirational, intelligent and experienced members of the Diaspora who have the

    appropriate mix of contemporary skill-sets and networks to make this happen. They

    simply want to be given the chance without being encumbered by the existing mission

    drift effects on the current Board. These members of the Diaspora are most keen to get

    involved only if 38 King Street remains one of the several options on the table

    (signifying the strength of goodwill amongst the Africa Centres constituents for the

    attractive and historic provenance of this building after all members of this group

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    have danced there as teenagers, eaten there as young adults and are now coming

    back to attend the recent series of panel discussions sessions that Sheila Ruiz and

    several volunteers have been driving). Several formal expressions of interest in getting

    actively involved have been received in writing in recent days ever since the proposal

    to sell has been confirmed and more widely communicated

    2.4.3 According to the Charity Commission for England and Wales information the Africa

    Centre has 20 trustees. This is a huge number for a charity with no employees

    according to precedent it should be 4 or 5.

    2.4.4 None of the Africa Centres widerstakeholders or interested parties, beyond the current

    Board and Arts Council England, has been notified at all, let alone in good time, about

    the prospect of the sale of the freehold to 38 King Street. Note that there are more than

    4,000 contacts on the Africa Centres current database. At the 16 March 2011 meeting

    when I raised with the Board the consideration to communicate the decision to sell with

    a wider audience, there was collective mirth at the idea. It beggars belief that the Board

    does not recognise how critical it is to ensure that its immediate constituents areinformed about such a momentous decision. It is in the best interests of all involved to

    ensure total transparency in relation to this decision and to build a collective narrative

    around such a concept, if anything to mitigate against the likely repercussions down

    the line when the very people we exist to serve belatedly find out that their much loved

    38 King Street building is officially sold / closed. The apparent level of secrecy and the

    siege mentality within the current Board suggests to me a worrying level of discomfort

    with either the option to sell or the process through which it has been agreed or both.

    This needs to be investigated by the appropriate authority, perhaps Arts Council

    England or the Charity Commission for England and Wales?

    2.4.5 Trustees have not actively sought sufficient information to allow them to make such a

    significant decision with strong personal conviction. Note that the Charity Commission

    for England and Wales has specific rules detailing Trustees' responsibilities in relation

    to significant decisions such as these. There are 120 pages on disposing of land by a

    charity on the Charity Commission for England and Wales website. Any disposal

    needs to be in the charity's best interests and there should be full stakeholder

    consultation and detailed plans for the use of the proceeds. Guidance states that "as

    Trustees it is part of your responsibility to think carefully before disposing of valuable

    assets of your charity which may be useful in the future. For example, you should

    consider whether it would be better to retain the land for longer and perhaps continue

    taking any income from it, so as to earn more from it later"

    2.4.6 Irrespective of whether 38 King Street is kept or sold there is both an interim and long

    term duty to deliver on the trusts objective to support arts and cultural expression from

    Africa and its Diaspora. I sincerely question whether the current Board has the

    appropriate mix of skill-sets to deliver on this specifically for the following two reasons:

    (i) One is that the collective experience of mission drift had left many, if not all,

    with a sense of organisational fatigue and it is very likely that whatever decision

    is made there will be little appetite amongst several Trustees to provide

    substantive input into the programming element

    (ii) The programming committee is dysfunctional and hardly ever meets. I

    understand that there is only one regular contributor amongst the Trustees and

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    that is Mark Artivor as co-head of this committee. The recent enriched

    programming has been almost entirely the work of a third party contractor

    employed by Business of Culture, Sheila Ruiz. She must be thanked

    enormously for the thankless task of maintaining the programming stream

    which has, since December 2010, been much improved. Sheila Ruiz has been

    supported on a pro-bono basis by volunteers whom she has personally sought

    out and secured services from, again with little to no input from Trustees. There

    is a very real and present proposition that suggests Sheila Ruiz and this group

    of volunteers could, and in fact already are, running the trusts entire

    programming output and could, at far less cost to the Africa Centre than

    Business of Culture, deliver expressly on the challenge of reinvigorating this

    charitys position in the minds of its key constituents, the African Diaspora and

    Africa-interested communities in the UK

    2.4.7 The Africa Centres existing human resource is already stretched (whether that's

    Business of Culture managing existing tenants, the programming etc or Trustees

    themselves stretched on representing the Africa Centre whilst delivering on their own

    day-to-day professional commitments). Just considering the option of sale is distracting

    to the extreme as all the energies the current Board has ought to be devoted to making

    what little it has go further (e.g. commissioning building works on the ground floor and

    basement; ramping up the programming to assist with its fundraising efforts;

    developing its new website which is nearing the latter stages of design and should

    come on-stream in April 2011; securing other / new Africa-relevant tenants etc). With

    the 2012 London Olympics now upon us we, once again (post the South African World

    Cup which the Board did not exploit at all), face another fantastic opportunity to serve

    the local and international Diaspora with something, I believe, is unique in its relevance

    to the Diaspora and Britain's own links to Africa. The current Board cannot miss this,

    perhaps most golden, opportunity to showcase the creativity of the Diaspora at the

    same time Africa's sporting prowess is on display literally in London's very own streets.

    I would also highlight that Londons local authorities and Arts Council England ought

    not to miss this chance to actively encourage the Board to utilize the Africa Centres

    provenance for the aspirations the relevant UK authorities have for the Cultural

    Olympiad

    2.4.8 At this stage, I feel strongly that not enough due diligence has been done on what any

    alternatives to 38 King Street offer in terms of sustainability and, as such, believe the

    current Board is not in a position to pursue an outright sale of the building at the

    moment. The fundamental underlying reasons are that:

    (i) The building is the trusts main asset

    (ii) The provenance of the premises remains powerful within the minds of our

    constituents;

    (iii) Its central London location is clearly a massive attraction (evidenced in

    CapCos valuation) and enables us to continue to position the organization as

    one that serves a broad church of people both for a UK African Diaspora from

    all corners of Africa as well as for a wider Africa-interested local and

    international community

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    2.4.9 The current Board should be encouraged by its primary stakeholders, such as Arts

    Council England, to give substantive thought to whether now is the time to collaborate

    more closely (e.g. via revenue sharing agreements) with other Africa-focused groups

    based in London such as the Royal African Society and AFFORD. I have personally

    offered to approach such groups to explore whether their aspirations would be

    complemented by enhanced partnership with the Africa Centre, however, the Board

    has not engaged in this proposition, reflecting its almost overwhelming focus on the

    sale option. If this global economic downturn has taught those in commercial circles

    anything, it is that a future defined by weak demand is / will require greater willingness

    to pool resources to better serve customers (hence growing evidence in commerce of

    joint ventures and efforts to collaborate within / across value chains - this has even

    spawned the word "co-opetition", this is not a typo but a play on the words cooperation

    and competition). Any historical, or existing, sense of competition and/or animosity

    between such groups serving the wider Diaspora needs to be dispelled as it may

    simply serve to compromise the inspiring potential of all these institutions. Who has the

    authority to push the current Board to more actively pursue such partnerships?Through informal soundings I am aware that Executives at the Royal African Society,

    AFFORD, the British-Nigerian Educational Trust, Star-100 and many others are very

    keen to become more substantively involved with the Africa Centre whilst stipulating

    that the 38 King Street physical asset is a key attraction

    I am keen to find stakeholders / external influencers with due authority that can help me in my, so far

    failed, efforts to actively encourage the current Board to recognise the full breadth of its duties before

    making such a major decision.

    Let me know if you can help.

    Regards,

    Boko Inyundo

    Trustee, Africa Centre