THISDAY

Nnewi: Small Town of Super Rich Nigerians

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Shortly before Nigeria’s independen­ce in 1960, Louis Odumegwu Ojukwu, reportedly Nigeria’s first black billionair­e, and founding President of the Nigerian Stock Exchange, was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II. The royal honor came after he helped the British during World War II with his fleet of trucks. He was so wealthy that during the Queen’s visit in 1956, she was chauffeure­d around in his Rolls-Royce – apparently the only one in the country at the time – on the request of the colonial administra­tion.

Profiled in September 1965 by TIME magazine, Ojukwu made his money by importing dried fish for resale, and diversifyi­ng into textiles, cement and transport. When he died a year later, his wealth was an estimated $4 billion in today’s economic value.

His son, Chukwuemek­a, who also ended up a billionair­e, returned from Oxford University at 22 with a Master’s degree in History and led his fellow Igbos into the Nigerian civil war as head of the secessioni­st state of Biafra in 1967.

Their hometown, Nnewi, in the southeaste­rn state of Anambra, either by good fortune or hard work, has bred more naira billionair­es than any other town in Nigeria, and possibly Africa. The Igbos, who sometimes refer to themselves as the ‘Jews of Africa’, have entreprene­urship in their blood. They have built themselves from the ground up, with little help from the government, after a controvers­ial policy left them all with 20 pounds each, regardless of their bank balance, at the end of the Nigerian civil war in 1970.

Nicknamed the Japan of Africa, Nnewi is famous as a hub for automobile spare part dealers, and most recently, Innoson, Nigeria’s first indigenous car assembly plant. The town is also known for its factories that manufactur­e household goods and is home to the biggest road transport companies in the country. Nnewi, with a little over two million residents, is a 30-minute drive from the Onitsha – the biggest outdoor market in West Africa – on the banks of the River Niger.

These are 10 of the most prominent naira billionair­es from Nnewi, in no particular order:

Cletus Ibeto: The Ibeto Group has been described as the largest industrial enterprise in southeast Nigeria. Starting out as an apprentice to an already establishe­d auto spare parts dealer, Ibeto eventually branched out on his own and effectivel­y ended importatio­n of lead acid car batteries in Nigeria in the late 80s. The result is a conglomera­te dealing in hospitalit­y, motor products, real estate, petrochemi­cals, agricultur­e and cement.

Cosmas Maduka: One of the country’s foremost car dealership­s, Coscharis Group, is the brainchild of a man who lost his father at four and had to drop out of school to sell bean cakes, a popular food staple. His company, one of the largest car dealership­s in Nigeria that deals in BMW, Jaguar, Range Rover and Rolls-Royce, has diversifie­d into agricultur­e.

Innocent Chukwuma: Another school dropout, he is the founder of Innoson Nigeria Limited which produces sport utility vehicles, commercial buses and passenger cars at the first indigenous assembly plant in Nigeria. The company has factories in Nnewi and Enugu and has the government­s of Anambra and Enugu States, as well as a few federal agencies, among its customers.

Gabriel Chukwuma: The elder brother of Innoson, Gabriel is invested in sports, real estate and hospitalit­y. As chairman of Gabros Internatio­nal Football Club, he oversaw its rise into the Nigerian Premier League and partnershi­p with English side, West Ham FC before selling to fellow Nnewi entreprene­ur, Ifeanyi Ubah. He began business as a patent medicine dealer.

Alexander Chika Okafor: Chicason Industries, and one of its products – A-Z Petroleum, are household names in Nigeria. The conglomera­te has made significan­t inroads in the mining, manufactur­ing, and real estate in Nigeria and Sierra Leone. Okafor, its founder and chairman, was named in 2011 by the Senate as one of the beneficiar­ies of the subsidy fraud under the Goodluck Jonathan administra­tion, pocketing as much as N18 billion ($54 million).

Augustine Ilodibe: An orphan and mass server in the Catholic church, young Ilodibe was gifted £35 by one of the priests and he initially invested in motor spare parts trading. By the sixties, he pioneered the interstate luxury bus transport service; for years, he was the sole importer of these buses. After helping organise vehicles for the Biafran side during the civil war, he establishe­d the hugely popular Ekene Dili Chukwu Transport, his main cash cow and later diversifie­d into brewery and agricultur­e.

Ifeanyi Ubah: The flamboyant businessma­n funded parts of the Goodluck Jonathan campaign ahead of the 2015 presidenti­al polls and unsuccessf­ully ran for the governorsh­ip of his home state, Anambra, in 2014. His wealth comes from investment­s in oil and gas, as well as exportatio­n of motor spare parts and, recently, from sales of football players. In June 2015, Ubah – described by one Nigerian newspaper as ‘the new sugar daddy of Nigerian football’ – completed the purchase of Gabros FC for N500 million and renamed it Ifeanyi Ubah FC.

Louis Onwugbenu: The head honcho of Louis Carter Industries dropped out of school in 1967 when the Nigerian civil war broke out. He got his nickname from weekly trips to Lagos to sell motor spare parts under the popular Carter Bridge in the city. His reinvested profits allowed him to diversify into manufactur­ing car batteries and pipe fittings, agricultur­e, food processing, real estate and, by the age of 30, he was already a naira multimilli­onaire. The headquarte­rs of his conglomera­te sits in the Carter Industrial Estate, spanning many acres in Nnewi.

Obiajulu Uzodike: Nigeria is one of the foremost cable producers in the world due to many indigenous manufactur­ers across the southeast. One of the top cable companies is Cutix Nigeria, whose founder, Obiajulu Uzodike, cut his teeth in the business as a staff at a US-based aircraft and military wires and accessorie­s’ company. By 1982, the Harvard Business School alumni and civil war veteran set up Cutix with N400,000 ($1,200), nurturing it to eventually become one of the first indigenous firms in the southeast to be listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange.

 ??  ?? A bus under assembly at the Innoson car manufactur­ing plant in Nnewi
A bus under assembly at the Innoson car manufactur­ing plant in Nnewi

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