Tag: richest

  • Wealth of 5 richest Nigerians can end extreme poverty in Nigeria, says Report

    The Inequality report released yesterday by Oxfam International , revealed that the combined wealth of five richest Nigerians, put at $29.9 billion, could end extreme poverty in the country.

    The report, “Inequality in Nigeria, Exploring the Drivers”, obtained in Abuja, exposed the large and growing gap between the rich and poor in Nigeria.

    It revealed that the benefits of the nation’s economic growth had been captured by a few wealthy elite at the expense of the ordinary Nigerians.

    According to the report, the economic inequality is a key factor in the conflict in the North-east.

    Oxfam is a leading UK institution, an international confederation of charitable organisations focused on the alleviation of global poverty.

    It has been working and campaigning with partners in over 90 countries worldwide for 70 years .

    Oxfam International also disclosed that Nigeria’s richest man earned 8,000 times more in one day than a poor Nigerian would spend on basic needs in a year.

    It said that more than 112 million people were living in poverty in Nigeria, yet the country’s richest man would need to spend one million dollars a day for 42 years to exhaust his fortune.

    According to the report, Nigeria is one of the few countries where the number of people living in poverty is on the increase despite the growth of the economy.

    The report also indicated that 69 per cent of people now live below the poverty line in north-eastern states, compared to the 49 per cent in the south-west.

    It also showed that women were not being captured on the benefits of economic growth because they tended to be employed in low-skilled, low-paid informal jobs.

    According to the organisation, women represent between 60 per cent and 79 per cent of Nigeria’s rural labour force but are five times less likely to own their own land than men.

    Women are also less likely to have had a decent education, as over three quarters of the poorest women in Nigeria had never been to school.

    The report said that poor people did not benefit from Nigeria’s wealth because of high level of corruption and the excessive influence big business and some wealthy elite had over government and policy making.

    According to the report, public office holders stole estimated $20 trillion from the treasury between 1960 and 2005. Multinationals receive tax incentives estimated at 2.9 billion dollars a year.

    This development, the report said, is three times more than Nigeria’s entire health budget.

    Small and medium size businesses and workers in the informal sector, however, faced multiple taxes, it claimed.

    “Despite being Africa’s biggest economy, the share of the national budget allocated to education, health and social protection is one of the lowest in the region.

    “In 2012, Nigeria spent just 6.5 per cent of its national budget on education and just 3.5 per cent on health.

    “By comparison, Ghana spent 18.5 per cent and 12.8 per cent, respectively in 2015.

    ‘’As a result, 57 million Nigerians lack safe water, over 130 million lack adequate sanitation and the country has more than 10 million children out of school,” it stated.

    Commenting on the report, Celestine Odo, Good Governance Programme Coordinator for Oxfam in Nigeria, said extreme inequality was undermining the economy and fermenting social unrest.

    According to him, Nigerian leaders must be more determined to tackle this problem.

    Mr. Odo said that it was ironic that Nigerians were living in poverty, despite the abundance of wealth in the country.

    He said it was important to free millions of Nigerians from poverty by building a new political and economic system that would work for everyone and not just a fortunate few.

    “The government can make a start by tackling corruption, ensuring big business and wealthy individuals pay their fair share of tax, investing in vital public services, and protecting the rights of women,” Mr. Odo said.

  • Top Ten Highest Paid Nigerian players: Ighalo the richest

    Top Ten Highest Paid Nigerian players: Ighalo the richest

    • Martins 2nd, Mikel 3rd, Iheanacho 6th, Enyeama 9th

    It is a foregone conclusion that former Watford striker Odion Ighalo is the top earning Nigerian professional footballer, with guaranteed wages of more than €12.1 million per season.
    Allnigeriasoccer.com can exclusively report Martins’ reign as the best paid Nigerian player lasted less than one month after Ighalo joined Changchun Yatai F.C on a 4+1 year deal at the end of January.
    If agency commission is not included in the mix, the former Inter Milan and Newcastle frontman takes home €8.4 million in the new deal he signed with Shanghai Shenhua at the end of the 2016 season.
    Nigeria captain John Obi Mikel will pocket approximately €8.4 million gross in his first season with Tianjin Teda.
    The top four earning Nigerian players are all based in China, with Liaoning Whowin striker Anthony Ujah fourth on the list with a pay packet of €5.6 million per season.
    In his first season in China, the ex-Cologne and Werder Bremen star pocketed €4.7 million.
    Super Eagles assistant captain Ahmed Musa is Nigeria’s highest earner in England, with 70,000 pounds per week wages, 14,000 pounds more than Manchester City talent Kelechi Iheanacho.
    At 1 million euros wages per season, Trabzonspor midfielder Eddy Onazi is collecting three times his wages at Lazio but he is not the best paid Nigerian player in Turkey, with out-of-favour Fenerbahce striker Emmanuel Emenike earning €2.5 million.

  • Nigeria’s richest women

    Nigeria’s richest women

    TWO days ago, women all over the world marked the International Women’s Day. They rolled out the drums, counted their many blessings and it was time to clink glasses. Women’s rights, political and economic empowerment had always been uppermost on the women’s agenda. Like a sore thumb, money and economic empowerment continues to limit the strides women would have loved to make. A few women, however, have come, seen and conquered.

    Many years back, you could count women who were multi-millionaires or billionaires on your fingertips. The few who made it in this category were mostly those who inherited such funds from their fathers or husbands. These days, the story is changing and women have, indeed, broken the glass ceiling. Armed with guts, passion, determination and perseverance, they have forced their way into the elite club.

    This brings to mind some of Nigeria’s richest women. Who are these women who bestride our landscape like colossi? The Nation on Sunday went to town to unravel the richest women in the country. However, women whose wealth were traced solely to inheritances and assets owned by their husbands were exempted from the list.

    Also women holding political offices, wives of public office holders, those having inheritance squabbles and women who had criminal cases with EFCC and other related agencies were also left out. Welcome to the world of Nigeria’s female mega-rich.

  • UK’s richest man battles Obasanjo’s associate over Nigeria oil blocs

    UK’s richest man battles Obasanjo’s associate over Nigeria oil blocs

    • To explain relationship with ex-president

    Lakshmi Mittal, Britain’s richest man, is expected to be cross-examined over his business practices and relationships with politicians in a court case that could offer a rare glimpse into his empire.

    The steel magnate, worth an estimated £12.7bn, is being sued at the high court for allegedly reneging on an agreement to pay fees to a former friend for helping to secure an oil deal.

    The case, which begins on Tuesday, is the culmination of a seven-year battle with the rice importer Moni Varma. Both men will be asked to discuss their relationships with Olusegun Obasanjo, the former president who granted Mittal access to two unexplored oil fields in the Niger Delta.

    Mittal, 63, has previously dismissed the claim, saying the case would be defended vigorously.

    Since moving to Britain with his family in 1995, the “steel maharajah” has become well known for his expensive tastes and his involvement in public life. He has donated more than £5m to the Labour Party and has imported marble from the quarry used for the Taj Mahal to decorate his £60m home. The ArcelorMittal Orbit – 1,500 tonnes of steel twisted into a sculpture by the artist Anish Kapoor – dominates the Olympic park in Stratford, East London.

    In documents put before the court, Varma claims to have facilitated a deal in 2006 for Mittal to access two unexplored oil fields in the Niger Delta, and to have arranged a meeting with Obasanjo.

    Varma, 64, from Northwood, Middlesex, whose company Veetee Rice is one of Britain’s biggest rice traders, declined to comment on the case on Friday, saying: “Let the courts decide if my claim is legitimate or not. My intention is not to malign anybody.”

    The writ details how Varma and Mittal have known each other socially since 1997 and regularly discussed business opportunities at social events in London.

    Varma, who was born in India but educated in Malawi, has longstanding connections with Nigeria and had known Obasanjo since 2001, the documents claim.

    In July 2005, Mittal Investments Sarl, a company owned by Mittal, launched a joint adventure with OVL, a subsidiary of ONGC India, India’s leading oil and gas exploration company. A month later Mittal and Varma met for dinner at an Indian restaurant in Knightsbridge and discussed possible deals in Nigeria, the writ claims.

    In September 2005, Varma claims, the pair had a conversation that is at the heart of the case: how much Varma would be paid if the deal came through. Varma claims Mittal said he could expect 5%-15% of the defendant’s investment.

    According to the writ, Mittal responded: “I will cover you” or “you will be covered … The reward could be even bigger than 15%, depending on the size of the deal.”

    Varma claims that over the following six months he was cut out of the deal.

    Mittal’s joint venture with the Indian government was successful in its bids for two licences for 10 years in downstream projects in Nigeria. The anticipated combined yield of the “blocks”, or areas of oil, was 650,000 barrels a day and the value of the downstream projects is $6bn (£4bn).

    Mittal’s lawyers are expected to argue that Varma was a social acquaintance of their client, and that Varma offered to arrange a meeting with Obasanjo, but dispute Varma’s recollection of the conversation in September 2005. The lawyers have also dismissed as fanciful Varma’s claims of introducing Mittal to Nigeria.

    The commercial court has put aside 21 days to hear the case.

    A spokesman for Mittal said: “Mr Varma’s claim is an opportunistic and speculative piece of litigation brought on a conditional fee agreement, which Mr Mittal denies in its entirety and intends to vigorously defend.”

    Source: Guardian of London