Africa's wealthiest man Aliko Dangote and Ngozi Okonjo Iweala, Nigeria's
Finance Minister were on Wednesday named among the100 most influential
persons on earth by the prestigious TIME Magazine.
Bill Gate, Microsoft Founder and Co-Chair, Bill and Melinda Gate wrote a
tribute in honour of Dangote in commemoration of his listing by the Time
magazine. Gate dwelled extensively on the philanthropic gestures of the
President of the Dangote Group in the areas of health especially polio
eradication and job creation efforts.
While Gate was lavish in his praises of timely response of Dangote to the
need for an health alliance by the private sector, Bono a lead singer of
U2 and a co-founder of One and (RED) wrote the tribute for Dr Iweala.
Gates, described him as a man who does good in addition to doing well.
Wrote he:' his business activities drive economic growth across the
continent. That's impressive, but I know him best as a leader constantly
in search of ways to bridge the gap between private business and public
health. It's for that reason he helped create the Nigeria Private Sector
Health Alliance. And it's for that reason he is an advocate for
agricultural research and malaria control.'
Aliko was classified in the Titans category which boasts of eminent world
personalities like Hillary Clinton, former USA Secretary of State, Jeff
Bezoz, Tony Fadell, Janet Yellen among others. Those in the Pioneers
category include: Jason Collins, Natalie Massenet, Mary Jo White,
Edward Snowden, among others. Barbara Brown Taylor, Robin Wright, John
Green, Kerry Washington were in the Artists category among others, while
Jerry Brown, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, John Kerry and Angela Merkel were among
those in the Leaders Category. In the Icons category were Pope Francis,
Alice Waters, Marina Abramovic, Cristiano Ronaldo and Carl Icahn, among
many others.
Time 100 is an annual list of the 100 most influential people in the world
assembled by the American news magazine TIME. First published in 1999 as
the result of a debate among American academics, politicians, and
journalists, the list is now an annual event. Although appearing on the
list is often seen as an honor, TIME makes it clear that entrants are
recognized for changing the world, regardless of the consequences of their
actions.
Aliko had earlier been listed as the 64th most powerful person in the
world by the credible Forbes Magazine. Aliko was born on the 10th of April
1957 in the ancient city of Kano, Nigeria. He owns the Dangote Group,
which has interests in commodities, cement, petrochemicals, fertilizer
among many others. The company operates in Nigeria and 14 other countries
in Africa, As of March 2014, he had an estimated net worth of $25 billion
Dangote is ranked by Forbes Magazine as the 23rd richest person in the
world and the richest man in Africa. He surpassed Saudi-Ethiopian
billionaire Mohammed Hussein Al Amoudi in 2013 by over $2.6 billion to
become the world's richest black man.
On the 14 November 2011, Dangote was awarded Nigeria's second highest
honour, Grand Commander of the Order of the Niger (GCON) by the President
of Nigeria, Goodluck Jonathan.He has also been awarded the highest
National award in two other African countries: The Republic of Benin and
Kenya. He also remains the single largest private sector investor in South
Africa.
Dangote reportedly added $9.2 billion to his personal wealth in 2013,
according to the Bloomberg Index, now making him the 30th richest person
in the world in their ranking, in addition to being the richest person in
Africa.
He debuted on Forbes billionaires list in 2008 with a $3.3 billion
fortune. Over the last 6 years, he has added $21.7 billion to his net
worth thanks largely to the incredible success of his crown jewel, the
publicly-listed Dangote Cement which has a market cap of $24 billion and
has operations in 14 African countries.
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