Africa In Focus

Africa In Focus: "The mainstream thinking now is that Africa is different and we could get it right if we want. The choice is fully ours, and it is now time for us to define what we want."

African Development Bank (AFDB) President, Dr. Donald Kaberuka.

Thursday, 22 November 2012

Note Worthy Facts On the 2012 Forbes Africa Richest List!




Apart from being Africa’s richest man, Kano-born business tycoon, Aliko Dangote was rated 76th Forbes world’s richest billionaire.
Notable newcomers include the list’s first two women: top designer and oil magnate (Agbami oil field), Folorunsho Alakija of Nigeria; and Isabel dos Santos of Angola, an entrepreneur, investor and daughter of that country’s president. Other notable newcomers are: South Africa’s Desmond Sacco and Koos Bekker. Sacco made his billions thanks to his shares in mining concern Assore, which he chairs while Bekker turned media group Naspers into a true multinational firm, taking neither a salary nor a bonus along the way.
Africa’s economic giant, South Africa  is home to 12 of Africa’s 40 richest, followed by Nigeria, with 11. Egypt comes next, with eight members on the Forbes list, and Morocco with five.
The wealthiest hail from eight countries – up from six last year.
 The two new countries represented are Angola (Isabel dos Santos) and Tanzania (Said Salim Bakhresa).
Thirty-two fortunes are self-made; 19 people have net worth higher than a year ago, while 10 have fortunes that dropped in value.
The average age is 63 – up from an average of 61 last year.
The minimum net worth required to make the list of richest Africans was $400 million, up from $250 million in 2011.
4 of the 40 draw their net worth from oil. Ten, by contrast, have diversified fortunes, either through ownership of a conglomerate (like Egypt’s Mansours) or ownership of assets in diverse realms, like Kenya’s Naushad Merali. Six built their wealth in the financial industry.


Rank                     Name                              Net worth ($ mil)             Age

1     Aliko Dangote                                          $12,000                        55
2    Nicky Oppenheimer & family               $6,400                          67
3
Johann Rupert & family
$5,700
62
4
Nassef Sawiris
$5,500
51
5
Mike Adenuga
$4,600
59
6
Christoffel Wiese
$3,700
71
7
Othman Benjelloun
$2,750
80
8
Patrice Motsepe
$2,650
50
9
Naguib Sawiris
$2,500
58
10
Mohamed Mansour
$2,200
64
11
Onsi Sawiris
$2,170
82
12
Miloud Chaabi
$2,100
83
13
Yasseen Mansour
$2,000
51
14
Youssef Mansour
$1,950
67
15
Desmond Sacco
$1,400
70
16
Anas Sefrioui
$1,350
55
17
Stephen Saad
$975
48
18
Sudhir Ruparelia
$900
56
19
Jim Ovia
$825
58
20
Shafik Gabr
$720
60
21
Abdulsamad Rabiu
$675
-
21
Cyril Ramaphosa
$675
60
23
Lauritz (Laurie) Dippenaar
$625
64
24
Folorunsho Alakija
$600
61
24
Theophilus Danjuma
$600
73
26
Oba Otudeko
$575
68
27
Raymond Ackerman
$550
81
27
Mohammed Indimi
$550
64
29
Samih Sawiris
$525
55
30
Said Salim Bakhresa
$520
63
31
Isabel dos Santos
$500
39
31
Moulay Hafid Elalamy
$500
52
31
O.B. Lulu-Briggs
$500
82
34
Alami Lazraq
$490
62
35
Gerrit Thomas (GT) Ferreira
$480
64
36
Koos Bekker
$450
59
37
Sani Bello
$425
69
38
Jannie Mouton
$415
65
39
Naushad Merali
$410
61
40
Hakeem Belo-Osagie
$400
57



Courtesy: Forbes

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