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The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Ratello: 10:20pm On Apr 27, 2019
THE FRAUDULENT NIGERIAN FORBES BILLIONAIRES.

Aliko Dangote
The fraudulent Nigerian Forbes billionaires are Alhaji Aliko Dangote and Femi Otedola, who also happen to be the largest economic saboteurs of the Nigerian economy.
It is an irony that these two billionaires who always struggle to be on the Forbes list of richest billionaires year after year, who strive to be the most celebrated Nigerian businessmen, are the most fraudulent, vicious and bigget economic saboteurs of the Nigerian economy.
President Buhari’s investigative searchlight should be directed at these two businessmen, the duo that are bleeding Nigeria’s economy dry.

The Genesis

Aliko Dangote used to be known as Aliko Gote, or “Aliko powder”. His mother was a daughter of the famously wealthy Kano merchant Dantata. His father was Alhaji Gote. He seems to have started off as a dealer in powder before suddenly moving to America. As a young dealer, he had sports cars, lived in an expensive house and lots of cash. His import-export business seems to have revolved between Brazil and the United States.
However, his ostentatious lifestyle soon caught the eyes of the American authorities — he received information that there was an interception of his consignment — so he blamed it on his junior brother Sani Gote and fled back to Nigeria.

Femi Otedola at this time was a notorious loan shark and gambler based in Surulere Lagos who started life in business by lending money at interest rates of 20–30 percent per month, knowing that debtors could never repay him. He would then confiscate and sell their collaterals at a premium.

Femi’s classmates from secondary school had all entered university, were working or had started some form of legitimate business, but Femi chose the ways of Shylock, extorting astronomous interest rates from victims and quickly moving on to sell their collaterals at the slightest delay, causing misery and financial damage to so many victims.

Their first billions

Aliko Gote, now living in Nigeria and running away from the laws of America, ran back to Nigeria and changed his name to Alhaji Aliko Dangote, adding the title Alhaji and adding Dan to Gote like his cousins, the Dantatas.
Femi Otedola, who seemed to have joined the Ogboni cult, now started wearing only white clothes and ran back to his father for cover, as many whose lives were ruined from his loan shark business were now after him.

In 1999, the Nigerian military handed over power to former General Olsegun Obasanjo, who had just emerged from prison. This moment became the duo’s golden moment. They became so close to Obasanjo that they became like his sons. A pact was reached between the three gladiators, to control the commodity business of Nigeria, and Aliko Dangote and Femi Otedola became Obasanjo’s fronts for this purpose. Aliko Dangote was to control cement, sugar, salt and rice, while Femi Otedola was to control the importation of refined petroleum products.

To make this arrangement into a cash machine for the three, the four Nigerian refineries that had a capacity of 445,000 barrels a day were totally neglected and left to rot. The power sector was purposely neglected so that 180 Nigerians would have to keep buying petrol and diesel to power their generators.

Enter the Nigerian customs and waivers

The duo of Aliko Dangote and Femi Otedola now put the top of the customs in their pockets. Moreover, presidential orders from above now stated that that the pair’s vessels should receive preferential treatment in docking and discharging goods while competitors’ vessels were to be delayed until any profits of the latter group were wiped out.
The next important instrument they used was pioneer tax status, whereby the duo were given tax-free status for so many years. During the same period, competitors’ applications were flatly rejected. The third advantage they got was the privatisation of state assets, which were sold to them at approximately 10 cents to the dollar. Aliko Dangote acquired Benue State Cement, Terminals, Nigerian Textiles, Nigerian Salt Company, a state-owned sugar company, Oshogbo Steel Mill and the NEPA fiber-optic transmission network. Femi Otedola acquired African Petroleum.

The duo then claimed to turn around these assets, but they did nothing other than call in auditors to ascertain the real value of these assets before calling Forbes to debut as the first Nigerian billionaires to grace the magazine’s rich list.

However, Aliko Dangote was one step ahead and moved to become the African king of waivers and duties. Nobody in African history has been given more waivers than Aliko Dangote and the single act of not paying custom duties made him not only the richest Nigerian but the riches African. Some conservative estimates put the custom import duties that were waived for Aliko Dangote at between $12–15 billion since 1999. There are cries of millions of Nigerians that Aliko Dangote should be made to return this money, as it is one of the biggest cases of corporate fraud in Nigeria and Africa.

President Buhari will need to open a special investigative panel to scrutinize Aliko Dangote’s businesses, as Nigeria can recover between $12 and $15 billion of waivers and unpaid taxes from this man alone.

One of President Obasanjo’s last acts of office of was to sell Nigeria’s largest refinery to the duo of Aliko Dangote and Femi Otedola for $761 million, approximately 10% of its real value. One of President Yar’Adua’s first acts of office was to cancel this fraudulent deal.

Upon learning the facts of the case, President Yar’Adua was reportedly filled with rage. Not only were the duo the biggest economic saboteurs in Nigeria, but they were paying PR consultants to build their image as intelligent and progressive businessmen in the Western media. Yar’Adua used the economic intelligence reports at hand to reverse many illegalities. He found out that Dangote had a monopoly in cement, sugar and pasta, claiming to be producing all these commodities locally, when, in reality, he was importing everything, fraudulently collecting import duty waivers and simply re-bagging the goods. At this point, President Yar’Adua lost any respect he had for Dangote.

The economic intelligence reports also showed how Femi Otedola and Aliko Dangote crushed their competitors by illegally using government agents to shut down the latter’s operations. They pressured banks to call in their competitors’ loans, used customs to delay the competitors’ consignments, underpay for state assets, avoided paying duties and taxes through their “pioneer” tax status, and even created their own “anti-corruption unit” to lock up business foes and friends who had fallen out of their favour.

The wickidness of this duo knew no limits and every real or perceived competitor was to be liquidated, their businesses shut down, thousands of workers were to lose their jobs and all the while Dangote and Otedola avoided paying billions of dollars worth of taxes and import duties.

The quarrel between the duo

President Obasanjo asked the duo to help raise money for elections and a deal was struck. The government’s oil earmarked for Nigerian industry was delivered to the oligarchs at extremely cheap rates and then sold at the prevailing world market price. Three million metric tons of fuel was sold to the duo at $59 and sold at $350. The duo thus made a profit of $299/mt or $873,000,000. Needless to say, Nigerian industry never received the cheap fuel that the government promised them and the state was robbed of $873 million.

Aliko Dangote did not have a house in Abuja and was found sleeping in Femi Otedola’s residence. His passion was sleeping with other people’s wives but, unknown to him, Femi’s passion was to secretly videotape others and use these tapes at the right time to blackmail his victims.

However, Aliko did not trust Femi and requested that their illegal profit of $873 million be paid to his younger brother, Sayyu Dantata’s, account. The money was paid into MRS account of BNP Paribas.

Femi now wanted some gas stations of his own and told Aliko Dangote that Chevron was planning to sell its gas stations in West Africa, under the Texaco banner, and that he would bid $200 million for the assets.

Aliko then instructed his younger brother to overbid for the gas stations, using up the entire $873million plus taking out a loan to make it look as if he had borrowed the money, but secretly splitting the proceeds of the sale with the sellers in an illegal kickbacks scheme.

Femi Otedola was outfoxed by Aliko Dangote and Femi went mad. The quarrel became one of the nastiest in Nigeria. Rarely had so much dirty linen been washed in public, forcing well-meaning Nigerians to intervene between the two as marriages were breaking up due to the revelations and circulations of video tapes of whose wives they were sleeping with.

In the wilderness

These were the facts observed by President Yar’Adua, which led him to immediately cancel many of the illegalities, such as the purchase of the refinery, reopening competitors’ factories, issuing import licenses to others and ordering an investigation into how many billions the duo owed in unpaid taxes and duties.

In addition to this, the duo was found to be Nigeria’s biggest debtors, owing banks billiosn of dollars. As Aliko Dangote did not want to pay the banks back, he pushed the business on his brother Sani Dangote, who took the heat for defaults (e.g. Dansa Juice).

Femi Otedola became the biggest defaulter of loans in Nigeria and his loans were passed on to AMCON as he could not repay back his loans. It was no longer business as usual for the former loan shark.

Femi rebranded his company from ZENON to FORTE OIL and went public, whilst Aliko Dangote also listed and went public. PR experts were hired to rewrite their stories and make them look good. In the stories, they were made to look like Western billionaires but, in reality, they were sinking in debt as they no longer had the ear of the President. Worse, the president was preparing to reveal to Nigerians that the two were the countries’ biggest economic enemies.

The duo found themselves in the political wilderness and Femi Otedola even admitted that he contemplated suicide as a way out. As they could no longer manipulate the President, they found a gentleman in the Vice President who would listen to them.

Then President Yar’Adua died and Goodluck Jonathan became President… and the duo sprang back to life once again.

Debt written off, waivers resuscitated

Femi Otedola now threw himself at the new President Goodluck Jonathan and pretended to be one of his best friends, but Jonathan has now realized that he had a Judas on his hands, as Dangote betrayed him at the last possible moment when he heard that the incumbent President had lost the elections to Muhammadu Buhari.

The Managing Director of AMCON was called by President Jonathan to write off most of Femi Otedola’s loans from Nigerian banks. In theory, Nigerian taxpayers’ money was used to pay back banks for private loans that Femi took and $1 billion was written off for Mr. Otedola in total. Immediately after this happened, Femi called his PR agents and had them relist him on the Forbes billionaires list and even went on to buy the GEREGU power station.

Mr. Dangote once again became the king of import duty waivers and unpaid taxes, and now started using the billions of dollars of waivers and unpaid taxes as equity to take more loans. Soon, he was announcing projects all over Africa ranging from cement plants to refinery and to a fertilizer plant.

In his typical fashion of wanting to monopolize all commodities, he announced projects that covered the entire national demand of Nigeria, getting the Minister of Trade to bans all imports from competitors. As a result, Dangote effectively supplied all the cement, sugar, salt, rice, petrol, diesel kerosene and pasta of Nigeria. What Nigerians did not realise was that his equity contribution for all these projects was simply the waivers for the import of these commodities that he was enjoying and the rest were loans that he took.

Aliko Dangote has not hidden his ambition that he wants to be the richest man in the world by 2017, when he turns 60 years old.

Given the way he robs Nigeria of billions of dollars of unpaid taxes each year, then uses this cash to monopolise commodity markets and push out any potential competitors, he could be in decent shape to reach this target if he manages to do the same in other African countries, where there is a general lack of strong antitrust laws.

Nevertheless, there is one man that has the power to stop Dangote in his tracks and this is President Buhari, following in the footsteps of the late President Yar’Adua.

There is hope for Nigeria if President Buhari investigates these two Nigerians, makes them repay the billions they stole from Nigeria and creates a level playing field for all Nigerians to succeed in business.

https://link.medium.com/tHm9djvRfW

Cc: Lalasticlala

Unfortunately this Buhari is not Yar'adua and can never be reliable to redress this anomaly.

32 Likes 7 Shares

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by fernandoc(m): 10:38pm On Apr 27, 2019
Somebody will just wake up and start writing rubbish

15 Likes

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Imoh555(m): 10:47pm On Apr 27, 2019
If they sue you hope you'll have money to pay

10 Likes

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Harrymig1(m): 10:51pm On Apr 27, 2019
Our problems in Nigeria are way beyond these two. There are arguably richer politicians in Nigeria.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Unlimitk(m): 11:32pm On Apr 27, 2019
What is the name of this fiilm

2 Likes

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by daddytime(m): 11:59pm On Apr 27, 2019
Interesting and a very true life story it seems...

How can Iforget.Dangote and Otedola's messy fight from 2009...they were almost opening each other's nyansh before they were gagged by those who would have been enmeshed in the fight to call a truce.

Otedola na canary wey sabi sing whenever things aren't going his way. Most of the infos contained here were actually thrown as jabs by him at some point.

I know he is presently not as favoured as Dangote is presently and he isn't very happy about it...so we should by all means be expecting more silky exposes like this from now on..

34 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Anambrapikin(m): 1:11am On Apr 28, 2019
Put Dangote side by side Ibeto without any Government interference and see who is the Real entrepreneur.

37 Likes 3 Shares

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Bede2u(m): 2:09am On Apr 28, 2019
daddytime:
Interesting and a very true life story it seems...
most of the people who commented didnt even read the write up. This write up seems real to me...honestly. because in 1997 when abacha was in power nobody heard about dangote....all of a sudden he popped up in 2002 as a billionaire

49 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by FearGodinall: 2:43am On Apr 28, 2019
Imoh555:
If they sue you hope you'll have money to pay
. Did you even read the write up at all before putting this trash down.

22 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by cr7lomo: 2:48am On Apr 28, 2019
This is y they don't have thriving businesses outside Nigeria... owning a business outside doesn't mean it's thriving... If u make 80% profit as a great business man in ur country, then u should mk at least half of that in other countries whr u hv interests... check out multichoice , mtn or shoprite ...these guys are being uplifted by government

14 Likes

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by anthonyuncle(m): 4:49am On Apr 28, 2019
are u sure of ur claims?

1 Like

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Kingkun69(m): 5:03am On Apr 28, 2019
cr7lomo:
This is y they don't have thriving businesses outside Nigeria... owning a business outside doesn't mean it's thriving... If u make 80% profit as a great business man in ur country, then u should mk at least half of that in other countries whr u hv interests... check out multichoice , mtn or shoprite ...these guys are being uplifted by government
but they are still getting money you cant be a billionaire and not have some skeletons in the closet every rich person does it only matters how well you hide it

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by tuniski: 5:09am On Apr 28, 2019
Anambrapikin:
Put Dangote side by side Ibeto without any Government interference and see who is the Real entrepreneur.
Getting govt to your side is part of being top entrepreneur!

9 Likes

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by chriskosherbal(m): 5:46am On Apr 28, 2019
This is really interesting..

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by GavelSlam: 5:51am On Apr 28, 2019
Bede2u:
most of the people who commented didnt even read the write up. This write up seems real to me...honestly. because in 1997 when abacha was in power nobody heard about dangote....all of a sudden he popped up in 2002 as a billionaire

Not so true.

Some of us had heard of him.

However, it took all by surprise how quickly he became the behemoth he appears to have become.

Some of us adduced it to democracy and opportunity maybe even opportunism.

A good read.

Wondering how much of it is true.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by GavelSlam: 5:53am On Apr 28, 2019
Imoh555:
If they sue you hope you'll have money to pay

This looks to be from 2016/2017.

Nothing dey happen.
Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Barryseal: 5:56am On Apr 28, 2019
Quite an indepth read. Sounds too well researched to be mere fabrication. Bookmarked

19 Likes 3 Shares

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Afamed: 6:10am On Apr 28, 2019
Anambrapikin:
Put Dangote side by side Ibeto without any Government interference and see who is the Real entrepreneur.
Keep quiet, Ibeto also was a great beneficiary of GEJ administration. Don't come on line to promote your tribal kinsmen as if they are innocent.

9 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by NgeneUkwenu(f): 6:13am On Apr 28, 2019
I have known the two to be fraudlent business men. I cringe, whenever I read billions of dollars ascribed to them by Forbes, especially Femi who by every indication, is very broke at the moment.

20 Likes 3 Shares

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by NgeneUkwenu(f): 6:14am On Apr 28, 2019
GavelSlam:


This looks to be from 2016/2017.

Nothing dey happen.

The Story is very close to reality. I know, because I know.

6 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Bighead9: 6:42am On Apr 28, 2019
Ratello:
THE FRAUDULENT NIGERIAN FORBES BILLIONAIRES.

Aliko Dangote
The fraudulent Nigerian Forbes billionaires are Alhaji Aliko Dangote and Femi Otedola, who also happen to be the largest economic saboteurs of the Nigerian economy.
It is an irony that these two billionaires who always struggle to be on the Forbes list of richest billionaires year after year, who strive to be the most celebrated Nigerian businessmen, are the most fraudulent, vicious and bigget economic saboteurs of the Nigerian economy.
President Buhari’s investigative searchlight should be directed at these two businessmen, the duo that are bleeding Nigeria’s economy dry.

The Genesis

Aliko Dangote used to be known as Aliko Gote, or “Aliko powder”. His mother was a daughter of the famously wealthy Kano merchant Dantata. His father was Alhaji Gote. He seems to have started off as a dealer in powder before suddenly moving to America. As a young dealer, he had sports cars, lived in an expensive house and lots of cash. His import-export business seems to have revolved between Brazil and the United States.
However, his ostentatious lifestyle soon caught the eyes of the American authorities — he received information that there was an interception of his consignment — so he blamed it on his junior brother Sani Gote and fled back to Nigeria.

Femi Otedola at this time was a notorious loan shark and gambler based in Surulere Lagos who started life in business by lending money at interest rates of 20–30 percent per month, knowing that debtors could never repay him. He would then confiscate and sell their collaterals at a premium.

Femi’s classmates from secondary school had all entered university, were working or had started some form of legitimate business, but Femi chose the ways of Shylock, extorting astronomous interest rates from victims and quickly moving on to sell their collaterals at the slightest delay, causing misery and financial damage to so many victims.

Their first billions

Aliko Gote, now living in Nigeria and running away from the laws of America, ran back to Nigeria and changed his name to Alhaji Aliko Dangote, adding the title Alhaji and adding Dan to Gote like his cousins, the Dantatas.
Femi Otedola, who seemed to have joined the Ogboni cult, now started wearing only white clothes and ran back to his father for cover, as many whose lives were ruined from his loan shark business were now after him.

In 1999, the Nigerian military handed over power to former General Olsegun Obasanjo, who had just emerged from prison. This moment became the duo’s golden moment. They became so close to Obasanjo that they became like his sons. A pact was reached between the three gladiators, to control the commodity business of Nigeria, and Aliko Dangote and Femi Otedola became Obasanjo’s fronts for this purpose. Aliko Dangote was to control cement, sugar, salt and rice, while Femi Otedola was to control the importation of refined petroleum products.

To make this arrangement into a cash machine for the three, the four Nigerian refineries that had a capacity of 445,000 barrels a day were totally neglected and left to rot. The power sector was purposely neglected so that 180 Nigerians would have to keep buying petrol and diesel to power their generators.

Enter the Nigerian customs and waivers

The duo of Aliko Dangote and Femi Otedola now put the top of the customs in their pockets. Moreover, presidential orders from above now stated that that the pair’s vessels should receive preferential treatment in docking and discharging goods while competitors’ vessels were to be delayed until any profits of the latter group were wiped out.
The next important instrument they used was pioneer tax status, whereby the duo were given tax-free status for so many years. During the same period, competitors’ applications were flatly rejected. The third advantage they got was the privatisation of state assets, which were sold to them at approximately 10 cents to the dollar. Aliko Dangote acquired Benue State Cement, Terminals, Nigerian Textiles, Nigerian Salt Company, a state-owned sugar company, Oshogbo Steel Mill and the NEPA fiber-optic transmission network. Femi Otedola acquired African Petroleum.

The duo then claimed to turn around these assets, but they did nothing other than call in auditors to ascertain the real value of these assets before calling Forbes to debut as the first Nigerian billionaires to grace the magazine’s rich list.

However, Aliko Dangote was one step ahead and moved to become the African king of waivers and duties. Nobody in African history has been given more waivers than Aliko Dangote and the single act of not paying custom duties made him not only the richest Nigerian but the riches African. Some conservative estimates put the custom import duties that were waived for Aliko Dangote at between $12–15 billion since 1999. There are cries of millions of Nigerians that Aliko Dangote should be made to return this money, as it is one of the biggest cases of corporate fraud in Nigeria and Africa.

President Buhari will need to open a special investigative panel to scrutinize Aliko Dangote’s businesses, as Nigeria can recover between $12 and $15 billion of waivers and unpaid taxes from this man alone.

One of President Obasanjo’s last acts of office of was to sell Nigeria’s largest refinery to the duo of Aliko Dangote and Femi Otedola for $761 million, approximately 10% of its real value. One of President Yar’Adua’s first acts of office was to cancel this fraudulent deal.

Upon learning the facts of the case, President Yar’Adua was reportedly filled with rage. Not only were the duo the biggest economic saboteurs in Nigeria, but they were paying PR consultants to build their image as intelligent and progressive businessmen in the Western media. Yar’Adua used the economic intelligence reports at hand to reverse many illegalities. He found out that Dangote had a monopoly in cement, sugar and pasta, claiming to be producing all these commodities locally, when, in reality, he was importing everything, fraudulently collecting import duty waivers and simply re-bagging the goods. At this point, President Yar’Adua lost any respect he had for Dangote.

The economic intelligence reports also showed how Femi Otedola and Aliko Dangote crushed their competitors by illegally using government agents to shut down the latter’s operations. They pressured banks to call in their competitors’ loans, used customs to delay the competitors’ consignments, underpay for state assets, avoided paying duties and taxes through their “pioneer” tax status, and even created their own “anti-corruption unit” to lock up business foes and friends who had fallen out of their favour.

The wickidness of this duo knew no limits and every real or perceived competitor was to be liquidated, their businesses shut down, thousands of workers were to lose their jobs and all the while Dangote and Otedola avoided paying billions of dollars worth of taxes and import duties.

The quarrel between the duo

President Obasanjo asked the duo to help raise money for elections and a deal was struck. The government’s oil earmarked for Nigerian industry was delivered to the oligarchs at extremely cheap rates and then sold at the prevailing world market price. Three million metric tons of fuel was sold to the duo at $59 and sold at $350. The duo thus made a profit of $299/mt or $873,000,000. Needless to say, Nigerian industry never received the cheap fuel that the government promised them and the state was robbed of $873 million.

Aliko Dangote did not have a house in Abuja and was found sleeping in Femi Otedola’s residence. His passion was sleeping with other people’s wives but, unknown to him, Femi’s passion was to secretly videotape others and use these tapes at the right time to blackmail his victims.

However, Aliko did not trust Femi and requested that their illegal profit of $873 million be paid to his younger brother, Sayyu Dantata’s, account. The money was paid into MRS account of BNP Paribas.

Femi now wanted some gas stations of his own and told Aliko Dangote that Chevron was planning to sell its gas stations in West Africa, under the Texaco banner, and that he would bid $200 million for the assets.

Aliko then instructed his younger brother to overbid for the gas stations, using up the entire $873million plus taking out a loan to make it look as if he had borrowed the money, but secretly splitting the proceeds of the sale with the sellers in an illegal kickbacks scheme.

Femi Otedola was outfoxed by Aliko Dangote and Femi went mad. The quarrel became one of the nastiest in Nigeria. Rarely had so much dirty linen been washed in public, forcing well-meaning Nigerians to intervene between the two as marriages were breaking up due to the revelations and circulations of video tapes of whose wives they were sleeping with.

In the wilderness

These were the facts observed by President Yar’Adua, which led him to immediately cancel many of the illegalities, such as the purchase of the refinery, reopening competitors’ factories, issuing import licenses to others and ordering an investigation into how many billions the duo owed in unpaid taxes and duties.

In addition to this, the duo was found to be Nigeria’s biggest debtors, owing banks billiosn of dollars. As Aliko Dangote did not want to pay the banks back, he pushed the business on his brother Sani Dangote, who took the heat for defaults (e.g. Dansa Juice).

Femi Otedola became the biggest defaulter of loans in Nigeria and his loans were passed on to AMCON as he could not repay back his loans. It was no longer business as usual for the former loan shark.

Femi rebranded his company from ZENON to FORTE OIL and went public, whilst Aliko Dangote also listed and went public. PR experts were hired to rewrite their stories and make them look good. In the stories, they were made to look like Western billionaires but, in reality, they were sinking in debt as they no longer had the ear of the President. Worse, the president was preparing to reveal to Nigerians that the two were the countries’ biggest economic enemies.

The duo found themselves in the political wilderness and Femi Otedola even admitted that he contemplated suicide as a way out. As they could no longer manipulate the President, they found a gentleman in the Vice President who would listen to them.

Then President Yar’Adua died and Goodluck Jonathan became President… and the duo sprang back to life once again.

Debt written off, waivers resuscitated

Femi Otedola now threw himself at the new President Goodluck Jonathan and pretended to be one of his best friends, but Jonathan has now realized that he had a Judas on his hands, as Dangote betrayed him at the last possible moment when he heard that the incumbent President had lost the elections to Muhammadu Buhari.

The Managing Director of AMCON was called by President Jonathan to write off most of Femi Otedola’s loans from Nigerian banks. In theory, Nigerian taxpayers’ money was used to pay back banks for private loans that Femi took and $1 billion was written off for Mr. Otedola in total. Immediately after this happened, Femi called his PR agents and had them relist him on the Forbes billionaires list and even went on to buy the GEREGU power station.

Mr. Dangote once again became the king of import duty waivers and unpaid taxes, and now started using the billions of dollars of waivers and unpaid taxes as equity to take more loans. Soon, he was announcing projects all over Africa ranging from cement plants to refinery and to a fertilizer plant.

In his typical fashion of wanting to monopolize all commodities, he announced projects that covered the entire national demand of Nigeria, getting the Minister of Trade to bans all imports from competitors. As a result, Dangote effectively supplied all the cement, sugar, salt, rice, petrol, diesel kerosene and pasta of Nigeria. What Nigerians did not realise was that his equity contribution for all these projects was simply the waivers for the import of these commodities that he was enjoying and the rest were loans that he took.

Aliko Dangote has not hidden his ambition that he wants to be the richest man in the world by 2017, when he turns 60 years old.

Given the way he robs Nigeria of billions of dollars of unpaid taxes each year, then uses this cash to monopolise commodity markets and push out any potential competitors, he could be in decent shape to reach this target if he manages to do the same in other African countries, where there is a general lack of strong antitrust laws.

Nevertheless, there is one man that has the power to stop Dangote in his tracks and this is President Buhari, following in the footsteps of the late President Yar’Adua.

There is hope for Nigeria if President Buhari investigates these two Nigerians, makes them repay the billions they stole from Nigeria and creates a level playing field for all Nigerians to succeed in business. Unfortunately this Buhari is not Yar'adua and can never be reliable to redress this anomaly.

Go and make your own money and stop hating. Yeye Igbo man. The thing just dey pain you say, no Igbo man has ever been mentioned by Forbes as a billionaire.

8 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Nobody: 6:42am On Apr 28, 2019
You forgot to add Dangote sunk ships importing goods to Nigeria if no agreement was made towards rebranding or warehousing.

2 Likes

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Nobody: 6:43am On Apr 28, 2019
Bighead9:


Go and make your own money and stop hating. Yeye Igbo man. The thing just dey pain you say, no Igbo man has ever been mentioned by Forbes as a billionaire.
Another poor tribalist, RIP.

29 Likes

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Tomide007: 6:47am On Apr 28, 2019
Bede2u:
most of the people who commented didnt even read the write up. This write up seems real to me...honestly. because in 1997 when abacha was in power nobody heard about dangote....all of a sudden he popped up in 2002 as a billionaire
As at when buhari was in power, dangote was the richest person in apapa, he was an importer then.where was the op when dangote took a 300million dollar loan from afdb. This peeps wey Don blow no be today the future dangote won't be known until he becomes one. Funny write up

2 Likes

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Bighead9: 6:47am On Apr 28, 2019
Thehumanlloydl:

Another poor tribalist, RIP.

If I'm a tribalist, what is the Op?
Oya, open your legs. RIP.

6 Likes

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by birdie: 6:51am On Apr 28, 2019
They have legitimized and will never face justice, not many will even believe their atrocities are real.
Legitimacy is what the yahoo boys are also seeking starting with E money and the endless charades of flaunting unexplainable wealth.

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Papertrail11(m): 6:51am On Apr 28, 2019
Dang refinery was supposed to start frm 2012 to 2016 guess he couldnt finish it early cos of money

Ngozi was prob getting kickbacks because of waivers she was giving to them.


The 2016 recessiion was a year of corrections in the Nig economy no more free money and your company had better do well else you go bust.

2 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by BafanaBafana: 6:56am On Apr 28, 2019
Interesting story. But as a rational person, I choose not to believe it no matter how much I wanna do.

It's a story and that's what it is.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by Papertrail11(m): 6:59am On Apr 28, 2019
BafanaBafana:
Interesting story. But as a rational person, I choose not to believe it no matter how much I wanna do.

It's a story and that's what it is.

they happn alaye remove emotions dont be afraid to criticse if you find it wierd

5 Likes

Re: The Fraudulent Nigerian Forbes Billionaires. by wirinet(m): 7:03am On Apr 28, 2019
fernandoc:
Somebody will just wake up and start writing rubbish

This guy is just wasting his talent. He should go into fiction writing, he will compete with J. K. Rawlings.

Dangote that had been dominating the sugar industry since the early 80s. Dangote entered rice around the late 80s. My friend took me to his house in dolphins estate around 1987, telling me Dangote was looking for distributors for his newly imported consignment of rice. All these were before Obasanjo ever became President.

This part of the tale is confusing;
He seems to have started off as a dealer in powder before suddenly moving to America. As a young dealer, he had sports cars, lived in an expensive house and lots of cash. His import-export business seems to have revolved between Brazil and the United States.
However, his ostentatious lifestyle soon caught the eyes of the American authorities — he received information that there was an interception of his consignment — so he blamed it on his junior brother Sani Gote and fled back to Nigeria.

What kind of powder was Dangote dealing with, talcum powered or yam flour before he moved to the US? And did he continued to deal in powder in the US?

The story did not also elaborate on the kind of consignment intercepted by US authorities? Was it powder?
According to the story, Dangote is a fugitive in the US and his brother Sani Gote, who took the fall for him is in prison?

6 Likes

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