The continent's wealthiest businessman talks about job creation, success and the opportunities Africa provides.
Meet
Africa's richest man: Aliko Dangote. Forbes magazine estimates his
wealth at $25bn, making him the 23rd richest man in the world with a
growing portfolio of investments across Africa.
The Nigerian
business magnate began with a small trading firm in 1977. Today his
businesses cover everything from cement manufacturing, food processing
to freight.
Dangote group now employs about 25,000 people in
Nigeria. It is building cement factories in 16 African countries and
buying mining licences from Kenya to Zambia.
“Africa is full of
opportunities and I think what we did was actually harness fully the
opportunities that we met on the ground,” he says.
“We have done
quite a lot in various areas. We started with trading, after we
succeeded in training what we did was go into manufacturing, which is
normally a very difficult area, especially in this part of the world
because of lack of power. But we have been able to resolve those issues
and we are able to succeed in most of what we are doing.”
They
say it is better to be humble, they say that no condition is permanent.
So I want to always run my [own] life – whether I have money or I don't
have money, I can alwayrun it.
Aliko Dangote, Nigerian businessman
Dangote's
is not a rags-to-riches story however. He comes from a wealthy Nigerian
family. After losing his father at the age of eight, he was brought up
by his uncle, who gave the businessman his first loan, which he then
turned into the most successful business conglomerate in Africa.
“I paid [the loan] back in three months because business was so good” Dangote says.
His story, many say, shows what is possible about Africa.
On
being the poorest continent's richest man for the fourth year in a row,
Dangote says “it feels a little bit odd, yes it's true, but then it
gives you a lot of thinking and responsibility. You ask 'what do I do to
impact humanity?' And that is why we do quite a lot [philanthropically]
in terms of our [Dangote] foundation.”
He adds: “We are giving
back because we are creating quite a lot of jobs. We are not doing like
other Africans, where most of the money is in the bank. We don't keep
any money in the bank; whatever we have we fully invest and we keep on
investing – and that's what we do.”
Because of his success,
Dangote has taken on the aura of an economic folk hero for some. But to
others he is a villain who has used his political connections to
sideline the potential competition.
The post Aliko Dangote: Africa's richest man appeared first on Pointblank News .
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