Tag: Aliko Dangote

  • Dangote firm sues Zambian minister

    Dangote firm sues Zambian minister

    Dangote Industries in Zambia is suing the country’s labour minister, Fackson Shamenda, for defamation after he claimed that a senior company official tried to bribe him, court documents showed yesterday.

    The firm, a subsidiary of Nigeria’s Dangote Group – owned by Aliko Dangote  ranked by Forbes magazine as the richest man in Africa , is claiming unspecified damages for slander and libel as well as special damages in the sum of $17,728, according to documents filed in the High Court.

    On September 15, the Post Newspaper in the Zambia carried a story with the headline “Dangote offers Shamenda a bribe” in which the minister claimed that a Nigerian human resources manager from the company offered him a bribe which he rejected.

    “He told me that it was a tradition in their culture to give someone a token of appreciation.

    “May I take this opportunity to warn Dangote and all other investors in the country to avoid enticing government officials with bribes – it hinders progress,” Shamenda was quoted as saying.

    Dangote Industries is setting up a multimillion dollar cement plant in Ndola, about 360 kilometres north of the capital Lusaka.

  • Dangote  shows  support  for  Otedola’s  daughter

    Dangote shows support for Otedola’s daughter

    The furore generated by their disagreement years ago notwithstanding, Africa’s richest man, Alhaji Aliko Dangote and his colleague in the billionaire’s club, Femi Otedola, have exhibited the kind of maturity not commonly displayed by aristocrats towards one another. The two buddies have continued to show that their bond transcends business or any other primordial interest. It is more a matter of love and mutual respect.

    This much they have demonstrated on several occasions, including the one of last weekend when Aliko Dangote put other pressing schedules on hold to show up at Kudeta Lounge to give his solidarity support to Otedola’s daughter, Ife, popularly known as DJ Cuppy. The occasion was the launch of DJ Cuppy’s maiden album, which also attracted top Nigerian artistes.

    That Dangote and Otedola had a quarrel that became public knowledge a few years ago is no longer news. Those were the days it looked like they would never be on talking terms again because theirs was profiled as one of the bitterest aristocratic feuds in modern day Nigeria. It took the intervention of highly placed Nigerians to douse the tension their quarrel generated.

    But the two businessmen have since moved on. During the burial ceremony of Femi Otedola’s father, the late Sir Michael Otedola a few months ago, Dangote was on ground to support his friend.

  • FG, Dangote sign $1b MoU on rice project

    FG, Dangote sign $1b MoU on rice project

    The Federal Government and Dangote Industries Limited on Friday announced a $1 billion (N165bn) investment for commercial rice project and farming to be operated by the firm in Nigeria.

    The firm has acquired 150,000 hectares of farmlands in Edo, Jigawa, Kebbi, Kwara, and Niger States to be used for commercial production of paddy rice.

    The President, Dangote Group, Alhaji. Aliko Dangote, disclosed his firm’s investment plan at the headquarters of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development in Abuja.

    He told ministry officials and journalists that the move to invest in rice production was aimed at developing Nigeria’s economy through agriculture.

    Dangote said: “What we are trying to do is actually to join hands with the ministry. Apart from making Nigeria self – sufficient in rice, it is also to make sure that Nigeria exports rice because we have no reason not to export rice. I think it will be very shameful for the biggest economy in Africa not to be self – sufficient in what we consume.”

    He said the investment would further boosts the federal government’s drive to attain food sufficiency in Nigeria, adding that in the next four years Nigeria will become an exporter of rice.

    Dangote said once his rice industry starts producing the staple food, the price of the locally produced rice will be definitely cheaper than the imported ones, adding that this will create room for a lot of investments in the sector.

    “With rice as a major staple, we have placed total sufficiency in rice production as a major priority for our country and key value chain for our economy.

    “Today’s signing ceremony marks a revolutionary tipping point by the Dangote Group to make Nigeria a net exporter of rice within the next few years as well as boosting inclusive wealth creation and employment generation,” he said

  • Otedola’s  burial UNITES Dangote,  Otudeko

    Otedola’s burial UNITES Dangote, Otudeko

    IT would not come as a piece of news to many that Africa’s richest man, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, and one of Nigeria’s biggest industrialists, Oba Otudeko, were not in good terms for quite some time. The two had been at daggers drawn over a parcel of land. The dispute was said to be so serious that the two were not even on talking terms. But all that appeared to have changed last week when they met at the funeral of former governor of Lagos State, Sir Michael Otedola, in Odoragushin, Epe, Lagos.

    Sensing that they might once again spite each other at the occasion, friends of the two heavyweights wasted no time in urging them to exchange greetings as soon as they met. Femi Otedola himself was seen muttering some words to the two; a gesture that caused many of the onlookers at the event to burst into laughter.

    It will be recalled that there were media reports sometime ago claiming that Otudeko, the Chairman of Honeywell Group, had filed a suit against the Dangote Group and the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), claiming $48 million as damages for breach of contract over a 10.8 square metre-land within the complex of the NPA, known as the 5th Apapa Wharf Extension.

    In the said suit, the NPA, the Bureau of Public Enterprises, Dangote Industries Ltd, Alhaji Aliko Dangote and Greenview Development Nig. Ltd, were listed as first, second, third, fourth and fifth defendants respectively. In his statement of claim, Otudeko averred that by an agreement, NPA leased the land to him for five years for N2.2m yearly. He said the land was to be used for the setting up of a bulk food handling facility, adding that in keeping with the agreement, it paid the amount and additional N290,000 for survey.

    According to the plaintiff, the BPE suddenly suspended his pre-existing rights and granted the concession to Greenview Development Ltd, which belongs to Dangote.

  • Dangote, Muyiwa Afolabi, others for APRA

    Dangote, Muyiwa Afolabi, others for APRA

    The Group CEO of Frontiers International Services Limited, Muyiwa Afolabi, has been named among Nigeria’s representatives at the 26th edition of the annual African Public Relations Association (APRA) conference scheduled to hold in Mauritius from May 27 to May 31. The conference, whose theme is “Advancing Africa”, is expected to be attended by more than 500 delegates from different sectors.

    It will also be attended by prominent Nigerians like Aliko Dangote and Ayeni Adekunle, both of whom have confirmed their attendance and accepted to speak. Muyiwa Afolabi, who is also billed to be one of the speakers, is a strategic thinker with world-class experience in value chain process management.

    A capacity building professional, he has trained thousands of employees in several world-class business establishments across the different sectors of the Nigerian economy. The APRA conference is aimed at creating and enabling professional environment for accurate perception, goodwill and understanding of the necessary and effective performance of public relations practice in Africa.

  • Dangote Cement: Dangote, shareholders pocket N119b dividend

    Dangote Cement: Dangote, shareholders pocket N119b dividend

    •Dancem increases capacity, delivery to stabilize cement price

    Alhaji Aliko Dangote, the founder and owner of Dangote Industries Limited (DIL), and other minority shareholders in Dangote Cement (Dancem) Plc at the weekend shared about N119.3 billion as dividends from the N201 billion profit made by their company in 2013.

    At the annual general meeting of Dancem at the weekend, shareholders approved the annual reports and accounts for the year ended December 31, 2013 including 133 per cent increase in cash payouts to shareholders. Dangote and other shareholders are expected to receive their warrants or cheques for the dividends today.

    A breakdown of the dividend distribution indicates that Dangote would receive the largest chunk of N110.7 billion through Dangote Industries Limited, which holds 92.81 per cent equity stake in Dancem. Dangote will personally receive N193.48 million as dividends registered in his personal names. Other shareholders would share about N8.6 billion.

    According to the breakdown, shareholders would receive a dividend of N7 on every share. Dancem has 17.04 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each with DIL holding about 15.816 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each. Dangote personally holds 27.64 million ordinary shares of 50 kobo each.

    The increased dividend came as the company witnessed impressive growths in sales and profit in 2013. Key extracts of the audited report and accounts of Dancem for 2013 showed that group turnover rose by 29.4 per cent from N298.45 billion in 2012 to N386.18 billion in 2013. Pre-tax profit rose by 40.6 per cent from N180.15 billion to N243.66 billion. Profit after tax rode on the back of tax credits to N201.2 billion in 2013 as against N145.02 billion in 2012.

    Addressing shareholders at the meeting, Dangote assured that the company’s prospects remains robust citing increasing domestic demand and opportunities for exports to other African countries.

    He said the company plans to add 9.0 million metric tonnes to its capacity by the end of 2014 to increase cement supply and saturate the market in order to stop activities of profiteers who allegedly are behind cement price increase.

    He said Dancem would intensify direct-to-consumer deliveries as a means of stabilizing the price of cement noting that Dancem sold 13.3 million tonnes of cement in Nigeria within the financial year representing an increase of 28.2 per cent over sales recorded in 2012

    Dangote insisted that Dancem has not increased the price of its cement in spite of increase in prices of most inputs into cement production in demonstration of the company’s commitment to making cement available to Nigerians at reasonable price.

    “Trading remains robust in Nigeria and we have experienced a solid start to the year with demand up in all regions,” Dangote said on the outlook of the company in 2014.

    According to him, the company had recently introduced 52.5 strength cement, which is appropriate for heavy load-bearing structures such as bridges and flyovers, through which it hopes to increase its market share in the short-term by increasing the level of direct-to-customers deliveries and competing on product superiority.

    Dangote also informed the shareholders the status of the company’s various African projects as the shareholders one after another shower commendations on the management of the cement company.

    “In Ethopia, work is well underway, to build 2.5m mtpa plant at Mugher with production expected late in 2014. In Tanzania, we have begun work on a 3m mtpa plant at Mtwara and would be fully operational in 2015. In Zambia, work is underway on a 1.5m mtpa at Ndola with cement production expected in second half of 2014. “We are reviewing plans for Kenya with a view to increasing the scale of our proposed factory from 1.5 to 3.0m tpa, because we are confident there will be sufficient demand both in Kenya and neighbouring countries, “ Dangote said.

    Group managing director, Dangote Cement Plc, Devakumar Edwin, attributed the impressive results of the company to focused and strategic management.

    He outlined that the company’s direct-delivery strategy is proving very popular with customers with this initiative now accounting for more than half of total sales.

    “We increased our margins despite continuing disruption to our gas supply and believe that the gas distribution infrastructure will be more robust in 2014, enabling us to improve our margins even further. At the same time we are looking at ways to diversify our fuel supplies to mitigate the impact of any future disruption and reduce the cost of using alternative fuels to gas,” Edwin said.

    He added that the company would next year open many of its factories across Africa to further realize its aim of being Africa’s leading cement producer and generate strong and sustainable returns for shareholders.

  • Okonjo-Iweala, Dangote listed among world’s most influential people

    Okonjo-Iweala, Dangote listed among world’s most influential people

    The TIME magazine has named the Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala in the 2014 TIME 100, its annual list of the 100 most influential people in the world.

    The Minister is listed in the “Leaders” category of the respected list, along with Chinese President Xi Jinping; United States Secretary of State, John Kerry; Russian President Vladmir Putin; Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, among others.

    Alhaji Alike Dangote; former US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton; Chair of the US Federal Reserve Board, Janet Yellen and German ChancellorAngela Merkel were among those honoured in other categories of the award.

    In an accompanying profile, respected global activist and founder of ONE campaign, Bono paid tribute to the minister’s contribution to achieving the historic debt deal with the Paris Club and the fight against corruption.

    He also lauded her for her work as Finance Minister, stating that “she’s got one of the toughest jobs on the planet.”

    Bono said of Okonjo-Iweala, “Humour and joy spill out of her. She is “fiercely intelligent; everyone wants her to work with them. I couldn’t be prouder to work for her.”

    In her reaction, Dr. Okonjo-Iweala expressed her delight and humility at the honour, following so soon after the Rockefeller Leadership Award which she got recently.

    “I am grateful to God for his blessings and I appreciate the privilege and honour of working for my country. I am thankful to my teams that worked hard to help me achieve. I appreciate the support and prayers of millions of Nigerians and friends around the world. This is vastly encouraging.”

     

  • Aregbesola  for honour

    Aregbesola for honour

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola will receive the National Infinity magazine’s Man of the Year 2013 award next month.

    He will be presented with the award during the Third Babatunde Jose Lecture on Media and The Society.

    The presentation will be preceded by a lecture to be delivered by eminent journalism scholar, former Executive Editor of The News and Managing Editor of Premium Times.com, Dr. Dapo Olorunyomi, at the Centre for Black Culture and International Understanding in Osogbo, the state capital.

    The magazine’s Editor-In-Chief, Olajide Ige, said the editorial board singled out Aregbesola for the honour because of his “radical approach to governance”.

    The magazine listed Aregbesola’s ground breaking achievements in youth employment, infrastructural development, education and agriculture as the basis for his choice.

    In a notification letter to the governor that he is the Nigerian of the Year 2013, the magazine said it is proud to be “celebrating a man, who took over a state that was moribund and near comatose and turned it into a viable and fast developing state through ground breaking, innovative and progressive policies that have revolutionised the state and set it on the path of progress, economic and infrastructural development, which has gained international attention over the past three years.”

    Past winners of the magazine’s Nigerian of the Year are businessman Alhaji Aliko Dangote in 2010 and House of Representatives’ Speaker Aminu Tambuwal in 2011.

    The honour comes with a N100,000 prize, which will be donated to the winner’s charity organisation of choice.

  • Dangote, firm in ’cement war’ in Senegal

    Dangote, firm in ’cement war’ in Senegal

    A Dangote Group cement plant, started about four years ago in Senegal as part of its expansion project and with the capacity to create 4,000 jobs, has run into trouble as competitors throw punches to stop it from starting production in June, writes AFP

    Its shimmering azure chimney stacks towering into the sky, the latest cement works launched by Africa’s richest man lies idle in a Senegalese meadow — stopped in its tracks by legal action and cut-throat competition in a rapidly growing industry.

    Nigerian industrialist Aliko Dangote’s cement business has been flourishing elsewhere in Africa and the Senegalese project, first conceived four years ago, was due to start production in June.

    But the west African nation’s government is being taken to a regional arbitration court in Ivory Coast by French manufacturer Vicat, which claims that the plant represents a “distortion of competition” in a country where the market is already saturated.

    “This is the first time in the history of Senegal that we have seen a plant built in violation of all the rules,” said Boubacar Camara, president of Sococim, a Senegalese subsidiary of Vicat.

    Dangote, 56, made his first fortune in Nigeria more than three decades ago when he started trading commodities with a loan from his uncle.

    His cement business is the jewel in the crown of the Dangote Group, the largest industrial conglomerate in west Africa according to Forbes magazine, which describes Dangote variously as “the richest black person in the world” or “Africa’s richest man”, with a personal fortune of $25 billion (18 billion euros).

    He has been expanding his empire outside of Nigeria in recent years — Dangote Cement now has operations in 15 African countries — but the Senegal project and the court case aiming to stop it may come to represent a frustrating inability to leverage his influence across the entire continent.

    4,000 jobs

    “A cement plant is dangerous, you need permits, prior authorisation and you also have to conduct an environmental impact study. That hasn’t been done,” Camara told AFP.

    The water-cooling technology involved in the $630 million (457 million-euro) plant would require a daily withdrawal of 4,500 cubic metres of groundwater, a precious commodity in an arid Sahelian country like Senegal, according to Camara.

    “It’s a race against the clock. Once production begins, it will be much more difficult to intervene,” Camara told AFP.

    “Given the conditions in which he has installed his plant, Dangote could come and set whatever prices he likes.”

    Dangote has said the operation would create 4,000 jobs and, in any case, the state has no power to oppose it, a source close to the Senegalese Ministry of Mines told AFP.

    “Initially, there was were certain procedural irregularities that Dangote fixed,” said the source, adding that “the main problem was the environmental impact”.

    French President Francois Holland wrote to his Senegalese counterpart Macky Sall in January about the plant “in order to raise awareness of the difficulties faced by Sococim”, according to a source in the Senegalese presidency.

    Sall responded to the effect that “the rule of law and the Senegalese courts” must be allowed to decide whether the project could go ahead, the source told AFP.

    Welcomed with open arms

    It is not the first time that the controversial project has run into problems.

    Senegalese courts ruled during construction that it encroached on a sacred forest owned by the descendents of Cheikh Amadou Bamba, a Sufi Muslim mystic and religious leader who was revered by millions of Senegalese.

    Construction was only allowed to recommence when Dangote offered the family a persuasive $12.6 million in compensation.

    Villagers in Galene, the tiny settlement on the doorstep of the cement works 50 kilometres (30 miles) from Dakar, say it has been installed on land once used by thousands of farmers and their animals.

    “We fear that it is going to stop us growing and raising our animals,” said Oumy Ba, the village chief.

    Community leader Bougouma Thiongane said however that the project had been “welcomed with open arms”.

    Galane and the surrounding villages have no electricity or tap water and Dangote promised to change that, while also raising employment prospects for every young person in the area, Thiongane said.

    The plant, one of the largest in Africa, will be ready to begin operating “within 90 days”, Aramine Mbacke, the CEO of Dangote Senegal, told Financial Afrik magazine earlier this month.

    It will produce three million tonnes of cement annually, three-fifths of which will go onto the local market, he said.

    The operation is being launched amid increased competition between Sococim, which has a 65 percent market share, and Ciments du Sahel, which makes up the rest.

    “Both plants already have a combined capacity of six million tonnes for a market of two million tonnes. They produce below capacity. That explains the reason for this war,” an official from the Ministry of Mines said.

    “In the sub-region, everyone wants to make cement,” he added. The management of Dangote Senegal declined to comment.

     

  • Stockbrokers kick against NSE’s demutualisation

    Stockbrokers kick against NSE’s demutualisation

    Stockbrokers have kicked against the decision of the National Council of the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) to proceed with the demutualisation of the Exchange without a resolution to that effect from a general meeting of owner-members of the Exchange.

    A cross section of leading stockbrokers, who spoke to The Nation, said it was against the Memorandum and Articles of Association of the NSE and good corporate governance practice for the NSE to initiate any process of demutualisation without the consent of the owners of the Exchange, who are mainly stockbrokers.

    The criticism comes on the heels of announcement by the National Council of the NSE seeking to engage the services of a consortium of two financial advisers in preparation for the commencement of the demutualisation.

    The advertisement titled “Invitation for Expressions of Interest (EOIs) for Financial Advisory Services towards the Demutualization of the Nigerian Stock Exchange” indicated that the invitation was in “furtherance of the efforts of NSE to commence its demutualisation” and that the consortium of two financial advisers will advise the NSE through the process of demutualisation.

    Industry leaders, who preferred anonymity for the meantime in order not to aggravate brewing crisis of confidence at the Exchange, said the advertisement and the purported mindset on demutualisation were like putting the cart before the horse.

    The NSE has not responded to request for comment on the brewing crisis of confidence.

    While stockbrokers generally appear to be in support of the demutualisation, they said the process appeared to be under a tele-guide to achieve predetermined objective.

    “The decision to demutualise should come from the owners of the NSE, the broker-dealers. Has there been an annual general meeting (AGM) or Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) where such decision was taken?” a leader of the industry practice regulatory group queried.

    Stockbrokers appeared to be unanimous about the absence of a valid resolution or an AGM or EGM on such issue as demutualisation.

    “That is a valid point, before anything can be done, there has to be the consent of the owners, it has to go through an EGM,” another leader of a trade group for active brokers responded when told about the concerns of other brokers.

    Stockbrokers said they suspected foul play in the manner that the council and management of the NSE have been handling the demutualisation claiming that the process might short-change the members of the Exchange who had laboured to build the platform to what it is today.

    They said by failing to organize an AGM or EGM, which would have determined the real owners with the right to vote on the affairs of the NSE; the Exchange may be working with a wrong list of members.

    “In taking a decision on demutualisation, there is the need to identify the owners, there is need for the owners to be told in clear terms what they are doing, and we all have to agree on the list of the owners. They have admitted some ordinary members in questionable circumstance in recent time, we need to determine their status because we feel that it is not right that when some people want to benefit from their sweat, then some people just pop in from nowhere,” one of the stockbrokers’ leaders said.

    Demutualisation is the process of changing a member-owned stock exchange, otherwise known as mutual exchange, to a corporate entity owned by shareholders. Established as Lagos Stock Exchange (LSE) in 1960, the NSE was conceptualized as a limited by guarantee not-for-profit organisation thriving on the goodwill, reputation and integrity of its members.

    The NSE is currently owned by its members, mainly stockbrokers and some high networth individuals and institutions. At the last count, the NSE has some 350 individual and institutional members including some 255 active dealing members. Alhaji Aliko Dangote, president of the Dangote Group, which has four listed companies including Dangote Cement, the most capitalised company on the NSE; is the president of the National Council of the NSE while Mr Oscar Onyema is the chief executive officer.

    The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) had two weeks ago confirmed that the Federal Government is currently reviewing the guidelines for the demutualisation of the NSE.

    Director General, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Ms Arunma Oteh, said that the guidelines for the demutualization are currently undergoing the scrutiny of the Ministry of Finance to ensure they serve the best interest of the country.

    According to her, SEC had developed a framework for the demutualization of the NSE and future securities exchanges based on the work of the technical committee and inputs from Nigerian and international experts and stakeholders and submitted this to the government for review and consent.

    Oteh said the public interest is paramount in the demutualization of the NSE given the symbolic importance of the Exchange as the only equities’ Exchange in Nigeria and the historic role the government played in setting up the Exchange.

    She said the guidelines would serve the immediate purpose of the demutualization of the NSE and future demutualization of other exchanges noting that “it is guidelines for anytime that there is any demutualization exercise and not just focused on the Nigerian Stock Exchange”.

    She added that SEC was also concerned that the current owners of the NSE should get more value from the demutualization noting that the NSE has gained significant value now than it was in 2010.

    The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) had in 2011 set up a technical committee on the demutualisation of the NSE, which submitted a comprehensive report on the alternative processes for the demutualisation of the NSE in line with international best practices. The committee examined regulatory policies, management, operation, governance and financial issues in demutualisation of NSE as well as various demutualisation models and experience including valuation model for demutualization.