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NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by NaijaEfcc: 5:55am On Aug 11, 2017
The Small Town Of The Super Rich
By Forbes Africa 5 min of reading August 7, 2017

The small Nigerian town of Nnewi has more naira billionaires per capita than anywhere else in the country.

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 Niger River.

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 with 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 organize 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 alumna and civil war veteran set up Cutix with N400,000 ($1,200), nurturing it to eventually become the first indigenous firm in the southeast to be listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange.

-Written by Eromo Egbejule
https://www.forbesafrica.com/wealth/2017/08/07/small-town-super-rich/

91 Likes 18 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by NaijaEfcc: 5:56am On Aug 11, 2017
I must say am impressed!! Well done our Igbo brothers!!
Lalasticlala mynd44 clap for our brothers nah

329 Likes 14 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by StOla: 5:58am On Aug 11, 2017
I thought those Palestinians said it is a city?

How dare Forbes call it a small town?

I ordinarily hear them say Anambra has 3 cities of Awka, Onitsha and Nnewi, as opposed to 3 small towns.

55 Likes 2 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by Lastking147(m): 6:02am On Aug 11, 2017
Nnewi
Nice I'm really impressed with this

221 Likes 10 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by Nobody: 6:04am On Aug 11, 2017
Wow

4 Likes

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by nerodenero: 6:05am On Aug 11, 2017
The write up was worth reading. Trust me, it can only get better for the Igbos.

I'm inspiredgrin

235 Likes 11 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by MayorofLagos(m): 6:05am On Aug 11, 2017
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.

This is the foundation for the article. Everything here is embellished and spawn in falsehood.

The first Nigerian billiionaire was a shipping magnate by name Henry Fajemirokun. The first to own RollsRoyce was Kano Emirate, followed by Fajemirokun. Sir Ojukwu never had a Rolls.

139 Likes 11 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by louqas: 6:06am On Aug 11, 2017
False News
ijebu has more billionaires than any other town in Nigeria.

Proudly yoruba

83 Likes 4 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by Nobody: 6:08am On Aug 11, 2017
MayorofLagos:


This is the foundation for the article. Everything here is embellished and spawn in falsehood.

The first Nigerian billiionaire was a shipping magnate by name Henry Fajemirokun. The first to own RollsRoyce was Kano Emirate, followed by Fajemirokun. Sir Ojukwu never had a Rolls.

Afonja the "rewriter" of history I sight you. grin

441 Likes 33 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by NaijaEfcc: 6:10am On Aug 11, 2017
louqas:
False News
ijebu has more billionaires than any other town in Nigeria.

Proudly yoruba
well go and write about ijebu billionaires let's read and make sure it's on a reputable magazine

384 Likes 30 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by MayorofLagos(m): 6:11am On Aug 11, 2017
woodcook:


Afonja the "rewriter" of history I sight you. grin

Good! I am your deterrent, no falsehood

14 Likes 3 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by PatriotTemidayo: 6:12am On Aug 11, 2017
This is the kinda things I wanna read about.

Not the stinking kid beggars churned out by men who believe it is holy to marry four wives and get all four pregnant, irrespective of his salary or economic capacity. Only for them to throw the kids to the street and cause mayhem to the entire country.

Kudos my Igbo Brothers.

216 Likes 11 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by Eshinwaju: 6:14am On Aug 11, 2017
MayorofLagos:


This is the foundation for the article. Everything here is embellished and spawn in falsehood.

The first Nigerian billiionaire was a shipping magnate by name Henry Fajemirokun. The first to own RollsRoyce was Kano Emirate, followed by Fajemirokun. Sir Ojukwu never had a Rolls.

This is why it is important to counter the dirty lies from the land of the erosion ravaged beasts because before....you know it....their lies becomes accepted as truth... shocked shocked.....as soon as I read that first few lines...I just wrote off the rest..... grin

29 Likes 2 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by Aufbauh(m): 6:16am On Aug 11, 2017
Anything that makes them feel good they should kotinu.

The irony is that the people who pride themselves as the average richest people in Africa are still the ones crying victimization and marginalization. undecided

21 Likes

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by Atiku2019: 6:17am On Aug 11, 2017
Igbos are industrious no doubt cool





God Bless Nigeria

123 Likes 8 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by cstr1000: 6:17am On Aug 11, 2017
MayorofLagos:


This is the foundation for the article. Everything here is embellished and spawn in falsehood.

The first Nigerian billiionaire was a shipping magnate by name Henry Fajemirokun. The first to own RollsRoyce was Kano Emirate, followed by Fajemirokun. Sir Ojukwu never had a Rolls.
So I am expected to take the word of a backward ignorant Yoruba tribalist over forbes Africa. cheesy
Yes of course.

302 Likes 24 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by StOla: 6:17am On Aug 11, 2017
louqas:
False News
ijebu has more billionaires than any other town in Nigeria.

Proudly yoruba

But the thread is not about Ijebus naa?

Or are you saying Nnewi does not have billionaires? Or did the topic state that Nnewi has the most billionaires?

Unnecessary comparison is not required on a thread dedicated to celebrate Nnewi.

119 Likes 8 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by prodigy24: 6:19am On Aug 11, 2017
I'm here

1 Like

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by prodigy24: 6:19am On Aug 11, 2017
Here again

1 Like

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by MrRhymes101(m): 6:19am On Aug 11, 2017
I schooled in the East and this is so true!!

164 Likes 7 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by cstr1000: 6:20am On Aug 11, 2017
StOla:
I thought those Palestinians said it is a city?

How dare Forbes call it a small town?

I ordinarily hear them say Anambra has 3 cities of Awka, Onitsha and Nnewi, as opposed to 3 small towns.
Many American cities that beat Everything Nigeria has to offer are sometimes called Towns.
Only a backward negro with inferiority complex will worry about nonsense like that.

210 Likes 10 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by cstr1000: 6:22am On Aug 11, 2017
Aufbauh:
Anything that makes them feel good they should kotinu.

The irony is that the people who pride themselves as the average richest people in Africa are still the ones crying victimization and marginalization. undecided
They are successful in-spite of Nigeria, not because of it.
There is a difference.
Besides, these are just the elites. The commoners are struggling in the Nigerian Jungle.
.

131 Likes 5 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by raker300: 6:23am On Aug 11, 2017
"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. "


Igbos are greatest in Nigeria

Igbos walk with giants far above Nigerian brain dead politics

150 Likes 14 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by LasGidiOwner: 6:25am On Aug 11, 2017
You disappeared from the thread I asked you to stay and advise your people but you took off only to land on another Igbo thread as early as 5am. Are you really curse? Your obsession is terrible. Tufiaaas



Till now you have never lectured your people on the need to quit ritualistic profession.

https://www.nairaland.com/3980039/ritualist-den-discovered-ile-zik



StOla:
I thought those Palestinians said it is a city?

How dare Forbes call it a small town?

I ordinarily hear them say

52 Likes 3 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by StOla: 6:25am On Aug 11, 2017
cstr1000:

Many American cities that beat Everything Nigeria has to offer are sometimes called Towns.
Only a backward negro with inferiority complex will worry about nonsense like that.

Only a propagandists will worry about being ridiculed by facts.

So why the need by Igbos who suffer from inferiority to falsely claim it is a city all along?

Are they backward negros for making false claims to a city when they could have their town equipped with all that is necessary and still be contented with the description of "town"?

Thanks to Forbes for not calling a butterfly a bird.

8 Likes

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by coolebux(m): 6:27am On Aug 11, 2017
Yesssoooo even in governance they're up there with the likes of Emeka Ojukwu, Bianca Ojukwu, Nwa for Orizu, three former ministers, Virgy Etiaba (first female governor) and so many other entrepreneurs and politicians

There's no single town in Africa that can boast of what Nnewi has, quote me with proofs.

55 Likes 7 Shares

Re: NNEWI - The Small Town Of The Super Rich By Forbes Magazine by Aufbauh(m): 6:27am On Aug 11, 2017
cstr1000:

They are successful in-spite of Nigeria, not because of it.
There is a difference.
Besides, these are just the elites. The commoners are struggling in the Nigerian Jungle.
.

I thought it is only the Hausa-fulani elites that do impoverished their commoners.
You mean the commoners are suffering from the same subjugation by the elites across every part of the country?

7 Likes 1 Share

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