-First
of all, introduction…lol! Mention Adenuga, and the next thing that
comes to mind is Globacom (Global Communications). But is this well-fed
African all about Glo? Worth a head-spinning $4.3 billion, Otunba (Dr.)
Michael Adeniyi Agbolade Ishola Adenuga (Jnr) is the 2nd
richest man in Nigeria, according to Forbes. That makes him the richest
Yoruba on earth.
This
reclusive billionaire has one rule that no one can change: he will only
get across to you when there is the need for it, but you cannot get
across to him. And when he wants to get across to you, he does
everything possible to track you down. Nobody in his office gets letters
or invitation cards without earlier notice irrespective of where they
originated from. You just can’t reach him, and if you work for a courier
company, it is nearly-impossible for you to deliver a package to his
office.
-Although his roots are in Ijebu-Igbo, Ogun State, he was born in Ibadan, Oyo State on 29thApril, 1953. The Bull will turn 60 in about two months when his 682-paged biography Mike Adenuga: African Business Guru
(written by award-winning Mike Awoyinfa & Dimgba Igwe) will be
launched. Mike Adenuga was so big at birth that he was called John Bull
in the hospital.
-His
parents: Chief Michael Agbolade Adenuga Snr. was a school teacher while
his mum Chief (Mrs.) Juliana Oyindamola Adenuga (nee Onashile of
Okesopin, Ijebu Igbo) was a businesswoman. She got married at the age of
17, learnt sewing and succeeded greatly as a dressmaker. Well-educated,
she was made the Iya Alaje of Ijebu-Igbo and the Yeye Oba of Ijebuland.
-He
studied at the Ibadan Grammar School (IGS) before jetting out to the US
to read Business Administration with a focus on Marketing. While at
Ibadan, he was very impressed with the Cocoa House (then the tallest
building in Africa) built by the Awolowo government. He dreamt of having
such an edifice of his own one day, and today, we all know Mike Adenuga
Towers. Located on Adeola Odeku Street, the 13-storey edifice which
took him 13 years to erect dazzles with gold-on-granite finishing. You
just can’t miss it!
It has a landing pad for a helicopter and was opened in 2004 by Atiku
Abubakar. He also has a
mansion in Ibadan and he named it ‘The Gold Digger’s Place’.
-The billionaire is a descendant of Pariola, a very wealthy and influential female trader born in the mid-19th
century. Apart from being the ancestor of the Adenugas, Pariola would
also produce the Adetonas, the family of the Awujale of Ijebuland, Oba
Sikiru Kayode Adetona.
-Upon
his birth, his father was so overjoyed at having another son that he
named him after himself. His elder brother, Demola explained that he was
not given the name because as at the time of his birth, the fad was to
bear purely Nigerian names. Otunba was the last child so his father took
the opportunity to name him after himself. He would later die in 1993
in a car accident and his son did a superlative re-burial for him in
2005 with one of the most expensive coffins on earth.
-While
at IGS, he and his brother (Demola) were nicknamed ‘Ad Belly’ for their
huge stature and protruding bellies. Both used to cross the Ogunpa
River (which they called River Jordan) whenever they felt like sneaking
out of school. They took the huge frame after their parents. Demola was
more of his dad while Mike took everything, including his business
skills, from his mum. As a child, and under the supervision of his mum,
he hawked goat feed, and picked up the street wisdom that came with it.
-Although
Mike was more fashionable and even introduced his elder brother to the
latest wears and perfumes, he still had to seek his help when it came to
academic matters.
-His
mother had always been quite cautious about the adventurous and
somewhat rascally nature of Mike. She really did not want him to go
abroad to study & wanted him to join his brother who was studying
biochemistry at the University of Ibadan. She reported him to a
commissioner of police in Oyo State then but he encouraged Madam Juliana
to let him go, perhaps, that was God’s plan for him. Worefa,
his mind was made up. He was leaving Nigeria. And he left. When he also
wanted to dabble into the very risky oil and gas sector and do what no
other Nigerian had done before (drill oil), she made her fears known
again thinking it was a senseless gamble. He calmed her down, and he
would later announce to her excitedly: ‘Mama, we found oil!’ Today, his
Conoil PLC is the largest indigenous oil production company in Nigeria
operating six producing oil blocks in addition to owning ¼ of the
Nigeria/Sao Tome Joint Development Zone Block 4, which has been proven
to have almost one billion barrels of crude oil and about one trillion
cubic feet of natural gas. Some people, like Dele Momodu, his mentee,
believe Adenuga is actually the richest man in Africa. I must chip in
here that in November 2011, 500 pensioners of Conoil engaged Adenuga in a
tussle over unpaid pensions. #AneyeToto!
-There
is something about Adenuga that caught my attention: he would never
disobey his mother. The late matriarch had enormous influence over her
son, and the only time he went against her directive was the oil
business issue. Friends say that whenever there was any disagreement,
just mention his mother’s name, and he would mellow down. Such was the
degree of tremendous respect he has for his mother. #Iyaniwura.
-While
studying in the 1970s, he had to survive and raise his school fees by
working as a security man and a taxi driver, an extremely dangerous job
for a blackman in the crime-ridden boroughs of New York -Staten Island,
the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens. His curiosity in Nigeria where a little
Mike tugged the steering wheel with drivers amused them, and they taught
him how to drive. This, he made use of as a means of survival. If you
are thinking he drove those shiny yellow New York cabs, you are wrong.
He drove an unregistered jalopy and had to ply areas where the police
would not harass him. It was as a taxi driver that he met a man named
Dele Giwa, who was also surviving as a cab driver. Giwa would later be
blown out of existence in 1986 by Nigeria’s first parcel bomb. As a
student in America, Adenuga suffered and laboured for months as he was
not getting a kobo from home. He knew the consequences, faced the
challenges and triumphed. He might not have finished schooling without
his extra efforts. Did I tell you that he also worked as a waiter and a
mortuary attendant in the US? Yes, he did. And by the time he came back
to Nigeria then, he was with a bushy beard. #HustlingThins
#IgboroORerin!
-As
a student in North Western Oklahoma State University, the school slogan
was ‘Ride With Pride’, and he would later transform it to become ‘Glo
With Pride’, when he launched Globacom.
-After
graduating, he headed straight for Naija, and without wasting any time,
started utilizing all he learnt. He did not seek any paid employment
but took the risky road of entrepreneurship. He took over the management
of the family’s small sawmill in Ogun State and was also selling
removable car stereos at the same time as he had noticed the problem
caused by the rampant theft of car stereos. Civil servants awash with
the Udoji Commission salary raise were buying cars but thieves would do
away with the car stereos. With Adenuga’s stereos, people could then
park their cars, detach the stereos and go to bed. Simple. And he made
cool cash. If you want to make money too, look around you, find a
pressing problem and create a much-needed solution.
-By
the age of 22, he had delved into the business of commodities, general
merchandise, construction, importation (of mainly sawmill equipment,
tomato paste, wines, beer and textile materials (especially lace) made
in Austria). Why is my mischievous mind thinking that good fabrics and
chilled beer are integral components of an Ijebu owambe parry? Anyways, just saying…lol!
-Believe
it or not, there was a time when Adenuga was so reclusive that it was
nearly impossible for you to see even his picture in the newspapers. He
even hired consultants to blank him out of the media and the general
public. His daughter, Bella, corroborates this: “My dad has always been a
kind of quiet person. It was Globacom that shot him into the
limelight.”
-In one of his very rare interviews, he narrates how he met an Austrian businessman to Newswatch:
“I went on a trip to New York and when I was coming back, I missed my
flight, being on British Airways, so I had to fly Swiss Air and I sat
next to the owner of one of the biggest lace manufacturing factories in
Austria. So, we were talking and he got me interested in importing
laces, and all sorts of things.” Okay, you know why Iyaniwura had to
point that out to you? Learn to identify and utilize opportunities!
Adenuga later reveals: ”The secret of my success is hard work, God’s
blessings and luck.”
-By
26, Michael ‘Aneye Toto’ Ishola was already a millionaire. Now, chill.
At this point, some critics will take him up saying that he became
fabulously wealthy by benefiting from the close and cosy links he had
with Nigerian military dictators. Well, that’s not a rumour. Babangida’s
oil minister, Professor Jubril Aminu came up with a policy to grant
licenses to individuals and encourage private sector participation in
oil exploration and exploitation. Otunba was one of the first
beneficiaries of the Petroleum Act (MKO Abiola of Summit Oil was
another). Upon getting his oil bloc prospecting license (OPL 113),
Adenuga went straight to work in the South Western Niger Delta Region
and in less than a year on 24th December, 1991, he struck oil
in the shallow (offshore) waters of Ondo State in his first oil well
(named Bella-1) becoming the first indigenous oil firm to do so. Other
Nigerians could not take the risk, and had sold off their licences to
expatriates. An incorrigible risk taker, he had hired an oil rig for $5
million BUT he recruited only Nigerian oil specialists to do the job (he
has always been a patriotic man). Since then, he has never looked back.
The first seed money that he used to start business was given to him by
his late mum. It was a modest sum but he used it judiciously.
#Iyaniwura.
-At
a point, he acted as a private middleman who got term-based oil
contracts from the Nigerian government in the name of Tradoil &
Crownway Enterprises while the UK-based Arcadia would handle the fuel
cargoes. He also built military barracks (and the Nigerian Defence
Academy, Kaduna with Lt. General Ipoola Alani Akinrinade’s younger
brother, Femi. Akinrinade, a former Chief of Army Staff, was the General
Officer Commanding, I Infantry Division, 1975-1979 at the time),
supplied the armed forces and the police with weapons while also working
as a distributor for Coca Cola, Nigerian Breweries, Cadbury, Guinness
and Continental Breweries. He was also a dealer for Peugeot Automobile
of France. For him, it was to ‘go into anything that gives me profit.’
-With
time, his fortune grew so amazingly that he was buoyant enough to sink
over $100 million into his own oil prospecting and drilling company, the
Consolidated Oil Company. This company, founded in 1990, is the very
first indigenous Nigerian company to discover, drill and produce oil.
And you know na, we are not talking of palm oil here….lol! Thus, his
fortunes are based on a tripod: telecommunications, oil & gas and
banking. He is also into real estate, food manufacturing &
processing (butter, cocoa cake and vegetable oil), domestic &
international market activities and aviation (not many know he is the
owner of Southern Airlines).
-Under
the General Sani Abacha regime, his Communication Investment Limited
(CIL) was given a conditional licence and frequencies to operate. The
licence has earlier been given to the Chagouris of Lebanon. Obasanjo
would later cancel all the approvals given to him by previous
governments. But a relentless fighter that he is, he told his men:
“Let’s go into this thing. Let us forget going to court and all that.
Let’s go under the new system and fight for the licence. We must fight
with everything we have to get the licence.” When he made a second
deposit of $20 million for Globacom licence, many scoffed at him and he
was told to stop chasing shadows. His brother, Demola says of those dark
days: “Mike lost $20 million, but he never lost hope. He never gave up
hope. He kept hope alive; that is one thing about my brother: he is an
eternal optimist. Something kept propelling him not to give up on the
matter. He pursued it and he eventually got the licence.”
-For
those who believe he is a proxy for IBB, sorry to burst your bubble.
They’ve been friends since the 1980s and have remained so till date.
Here is what the top-of-the-hill-residing, gap-toothed General has to
say about the widespread rumour: “We meet, we talk, like the good
friends that we are. But I also have one policy that governs my
relationship with friends that are very close to me. Whether it was
M.K.O Abiola, whether it is Mike Adenuga, and probably five or so
others, I don’t get involved in their businesses. You can go and ask
them.” The General went ahead to describe Mike Adenuga as a very loyal
and reliable friend, and one who never forgets favours, unlike many who
abandoned him when he left power in August 1993. He states: “When I left
office, a few of my friends honestly stood by me and I remain eternally
grateful to them. Mike is one of them. Another man who doesn’t want his
name mentioned any time I speak on this issue is one of them. What I
like about them is this: they appreciate whatever little effort you did
for them and so, they don’t abandon you. Some people will tell you, ‘ah,
when I was in the office, a lot of people used to come to me, now I
left office, you don’t find anybody.’ This is the Nigerian factor for
you. But these characters remain close and I honestly remain grateful.”
-When his mother died, he gave her a most befitting burial in Ijebu Igbo, Ogun State on 13th
September, 2005. A carnival-like ceremony, it was stormed by former
President Obasanjo who buzzed in in a helicopter (that man and effizy
sha…lol!) and when he entered the church, no one else was allowed to
come in except Titi Atiku Abubakar (wife of former Vice President Atiku
Abubakar and WOTCLEF Founder). Other guests: Aliko Dangote and Femi
Otedola. Governors of Lagos, Ogun, Taraba, Bauchi, Niger, Kaduna and Imo
also gave a new definition to the Yoruba parlance of olowonshoreolowo (the
wealthy always mingle with one another). Even IBB showed up at the
wake-keeping. But the Awujale of Ijebuland, who is the Paramount Ruler
of Ijebus was not able to attend because it is against the tradition for
the Kabiyesi to lay his eyes on a corpse. His staff of office was
placed on her hearse. Encased in a casket made of gold, Mama Adenuga was
laid to rest in a marble grave.
-He
faced a lot of troubles in the hands of fellow Ogun dude and former
Nigerian President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo. In his efforts aimed at
procuring a telecommunications licence, he was thoroughly humiliated by
Baba Iyabo (some felt he was being persecuted because of his ally, Atiku
Abubakar who was then slugging it out with OBJ). The following scenario
occurred in Aso Rock Presidential Villa when Obasanjo still held sway: “Okay, I would show you that I am playing God and kuku (ultimately)
destroy you once and for all” said Obasanjo; a threat to which the
frightened and weather-beaten Adenuga replied with his knees crawling on
the floors in Aso Rock and his palms stretched full length in the
charged, steamy atmosphere: “Sir, I am your son. Please don’t be angry
with me.” Obasanjo: “I shouldn’t be angry? Why shouldn’t I be angry? See
you now. You would come and prostrate and when you leave here,
tomorrow, you would go and be publishing your adverts, abusing me. No be
so (Is that not true)?”
Adenuga lost $20 million (N3.2 billion) when he was denied the license
not even after he had donated a multi-million naira library to
Obasanjo’s Bells University of Technology in Ota. But he didn’t give up.
He applied again. He would send people to beg OBJ and on occasions, he
would prostrate to the Ebora of Owu as a Yorubaman but the former
president would stare into his eyes and thunder: ‘I would not give you
my licence!’ He would then mutter some curses. But Adenuga was
undettered. He was always full of hope and optimism (that is important, I
tell you). At another point, IBB tried to intervene on the issue of
Adenuga’s licence with Obasanjo. The Commander-in-Chief was enraged, and
accused IBB of using Adenuga as a screen to protect his vested
interests. IBB denied the allegations and told Obasanjo that the
so-called security report on the issue was a figment of the imagination
of his EFCC boys. Obasanjo practically ordered IBB out of Aso Rock, and
shouted at him as he left ‘‘Get out, just go!’ ‘. Still in
his yet to be released biography, he talks of how Obasanjo demanded a
sum of £ 1 million donation (N250 million) from him for his Presidential
Library Project. Adenuga had no choice but to drop a quarter of a
billion naira as the Chief Launcher. In the book, the scenario was
described thus: “Adenuga had gone to Abeokuta with Dr. Yemi Ogunbuyi for
the occasion and the duo had decided to go to greet Baba first. But
they were intercepted by a man in a white Kaftan robe who turned out to
be Obasanjo’s cousin. The cousin politely said Baba wanted to know how
much Adenuga was going to donate. Incidentally, Adenuga had raised this
question with Ogunbiyi on their way coming. ‘How much do you think I
should donate to this thing?’
‘I don’t really know may be N100 million,’ Ogunbiyi suggested.‘That’s exactly how much I have in mind,’ declared Adenuga.
“Now the question from Obasanjo’s emissary was curious and unusual, he thought, but nevertheless, he had no choice but to inform the man that he planned to donate N100 million, thinking the man would be very impressed. Wrong. Obasanjo’s cousin brought out a piece of paper and handed it to Adenuga. ‘Sorry sir, but Baba says you can’t donate less than that amount,’ the man had written.
“Inside the piece of paper was the sum of N250 million scribbled in Obasanjo’s handwriting with a red pen. ‘No problem,’ Adenuga told the emissary, wondering if others were subjected to the same experience, but also knowing he dared not ask anybody, lest he be betrayed. He later showed Ogunbiyi the piece of paper. ‘I’ll give anything he wants,’ he told Ogunbiyi. ‘I’m afraid of that man o. N250 million is about the price of an oil well,’ Adenuga added.”
-Never
far from the corridors of power, he was arrested in July 2006 by
operatives of the Economic & Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
Mobile policemen and security agents numbering about 70 were mobilized
to arrest the titanic mogul. In a commando style reminiscent of the US
Navy Seals, they stormed his Lagos residence, pulled down his gate with
hammers, generators, welding equipment and other heavy machinery, and
flew him to Abuja. He was questioned for some hours before he was
released, then he visited the Aso Villa. What actually transpired that
day, only Chineke knows but he was so traumatized and when reports were
coming that he may be rearrested and prosecuted, he left for London and
did not come back until a new government was in place. He has had his
brushes with the law, and at a time, the Federal Inland Revenue Service
(FIRS) sealed up his oil companies for allegedly evading taxes of about
N89 billion. Some believe he, alongside other tycoons are stifling
Nigeria’s development while some people sharply disagree highlighting
his contributions to the economy. What do you think?
-At
this juncture, it is worthy of mention that Otunba Adenuga is one of
the most heavily-guarded billionaires in Nigeria. Some reports indicate
that he is actually the most heavily-guarded. You will never miss his
retinue of fierce-looking bodyguards. He has been described as extremely
paranoid about his personal security but you will know one reason for
this later on. A man who guards his privacy jealously, his Victoria
Island office is underground and he was very rarely seen in public until
recently. His biographers say of him: “Yes, Mike Adenuga is more of a
spirit. A spirit who is hardly seen in public, who hardly grants media
interviews, who jealously and zealously guards his privacy, who shuns
publicity of any type and who even in the past, paid PR and media
consultants full-time to ensure that stories about him and his pictures
didn’t appear in the media at all… For Mike Adenuga, elusiveness is the
word. He is the “Invisible Man” of fiction turned real. A man who’s
always playing hard to get. Now you see him, now you don’t. The fact is
you don’t even see him at all…”
Still
on his elusiveness, Soyinka narrates his experience, calling him a
magician: “I can’t remember when last I saw him or spoke to him. Adenuga
has a vanishing habit. He would just disappear.” At a time, there was
supposed to be a meeting with the Bull in London but WS never saw him
and he left in anger. Soyinka continues: “All I know is that I see
Globacom advertisement everywhere. I also know that Adenuga supports
sports, especially football. I wish he could do more for the arts. I
have sat him down once. I told him: ‘Listen, you have the money and the
enthusiasm, but we have the ideas. Let’s sit down and work together and
let us do more for the arts. He would agree, but I said, he would then
disappear. He has this vanishing habit. My wish for Globacom is that
they would do more for the arts. I feel envious about the amount
Globacom is committing to sports. I wish I could get his attention
sufficiently to do even half for the arts. If Adenuga is reading this,
he should stop running away. He should come and sit down with me so that
we can do something for the arts.” Otunba later apologized
(sweet-mouth..lol) and they made up.
-Stanley
Ebochukwu, Editor-in-Chief of BusinessDay (I like that paper die! )
says: Adenuga is somebody one would call an enigma. You can’t see him,
if you want to see him. If you call him, he can’t take your calls. But
if he wants to see you, he would see you. And if he wants you to see
him, you would see him. Most businessmen tend to behave that way,
because of the fear of people.
-But
if you think that is all about his disappearing acts, listen to what
his fellow billionaire and Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote has to
say about him: “I haven’t seen Mike for a very long time. I don’t have
his number. I don’t know where to reach him. Even if you put a gun on my
head and you ask me to lead you to Mike, I will never be able to. He is
just nowhere to be found. Mike is a mystery to me.” The most
surprising thing about this is that both of them have their residences
on the same lane in Victoria Island. Amazing!
-The
Evil Genius and Nigeria’s only military president, General Ibrahim
Badamasi Babangida had this to say about the suave and debonair Ijebu
billionaire: ‘One thing stands out uniquely about it (Globacom). It is
the brain of a Nigerian. He is really trying to make it the leading
telecommunication outfit, not only in Nigeria, but also in Africa.
Adenuga is a very serious businessman. And he is not a flamboyant who
goes to sleep, folds his arms, saying business is doing well. No, he
works very hard. I think he is worthy of emulation.’ #Gbam! Una don hear
am with your ears. Nobel Laureate and also fellow Ogunite (abi how I go
call am na…lol!), Wole Akinwande Soyinka also gave his full support:
‘He is a young entrepreneur I have come to admire. I like his drive. He
sought me out when he was to begin his Globacom business. I thereafter
made enquiries about him. I was actually told by somebody whose judgment
I respect that Mike Adenuga is somebody with enormous drive and ideas.
And he said I should give him as much help as I could. I checked him out
and I discovered that he likes challenges. He has the drive to
deliver.’
His elder brother, Otunba Demola Adenuga says of him:
“Mike
is the star of the family. Not just our family but the whole of
Nigeria. I see him as my benefactor. I should not be ashamed to say
that. He has helped me in all facets of life.”
-In
another piece written by Mike Awoyinfa and Dimgba Igwe (I say the
finest authorities on him), they narrate the words of one of Adenuga’s
closest associates, Dr. Rafiu Ladipo: “He takes risks and he is ready to
stick it to the end. He never gives up. Is there anything he touches
that doesn’t turn into gold? He is such a determined person. He is
always charging like a bull. When he wakes up in the morning, he thinks
about his business and nothing but his business. He is not a socialite.
You can never catch him attending parties. He works Saturday, Sunday,
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday…He goes
on and on like that facing his business.” Reminds me of another
billionaire in Nigeria who works for 18 hours a day. Yes, you guessed
right.
-Well,
just like a raging bull after a doomed matador, he didn’t stop his
entrepreneurial triumph in the oil industry. In February 1990, he made a
bold entry into the banking industry. He floated Equatorial Trust Bank
(ETB). And later on, he launched his biggest and most ambitious project
ever, Globacom which drastically crashed the rates of phone calls (I
still find it very hard to forgive MTN for calling at N60 per minute!).
-His
calm mien belies an underlying aggressiveness and relentless
determination of a tycoon. He can also be very ruthless with lazy and
incompetent workers (if na you too nko?). According to Mohammed Jameel,
Glo’s Chief Operating Officer (COO): ‘Two, three days after joining
Globacom, he called me to his office. The first day I met him, he was
very quiet. And I didn’t want to say anything. I just watched him. Of
course, a lot of my colleagues were there. I was very impressed with
him. He was planning to launch the brand Globacom. I saw in him a lot of
passion. I saw in him a lot of commitment. I saw in him a lot of
vision. He wanted the brand to succeed. And the kind of figures he was
talking about in terms of subscribers and putting in infrastructure did
really surprise me. Jameel continues: ‘He is a very successful
entrepreneur who can turn any venture into good. He is a very, very
aggressive manager. He is a very target-oriented manager. He is a
manager who has a huge vision. He always thinks big. If you are hearing
him for the first time, you would think this man is just joking. But he
is not joking. Whatever he says, he is determined to achieve it. He is
very passionate about whatever you do with the business you do for the
brand. Even things like branding the street, he gets into the details to
get things right. And he doesn’t take instant or spontaneous decisions.
He has to think it across. He doesn’t take decisions on his own. He
respects the views of others. (something a lot of people have to
learn, especially those with coins and small small change who at the
slightest opportunity, insult others who disagree with them. I added
that ajasa myself!). He calls all of us and gives us the
opportunity to air our own views, share our thoughts, share our ideas.
He also makes his own input and we end up coming up with a collective
decision. He lends his ears and mind to whatever is being talked about;
irrespective of whether it is the COO or the person employed in the
customer service.” #Gbam! Una don hear am again. Shey e ring abi make I
redial am? #Lmao!
-He
actually saved the National Oil & Chemical Marketing Company
(NOLCHEM) from the jaws of death. He bought it and transformed it into
what many of us now know as Conoil Nigeria place, one of the most
profitable entities in Nigeria. NOLCHEM was the first indigenous
petroleum products marketing company, and the current Oyo State
Governor, Senator Abiola Adeyemi Ajimobi was a Managing Director/Chief
Executive Officer, he joined in 1979.
-He
is divorced from Fola, his first wife and the court awarded him the
custody of the children and even the pregnancy Fola was carrying at that
time. She was immensely pained by the court’s judgment. Today, he is
married to the delectable Joyce Titilola Adenuga (nee Adewale) (see
pictures on our website). Okay, there is an interesting story here. She
had come for a job at Devcom Merchant Bank owned by Otunba when he was
enchanted by her natural beauty and endowments. According to Adenuga’s
early friend, associate and fellow IBB boy, Orji Uzor Kalu, he and
Otunba had a slang for heavily-endowed women: ‘Burkina Faso’, with
Burkina standing for the heavy ‘fronts’ and the ‘Faso’ for the
superloaded ‘rears’. #StopRollingYaEyes,AreYouALearner? LOL! Adenuga did
not prefer women with Burkina but remained ‘Fasoless’ (chai! Burkina
Faso don suffer…lol! #AFCON). Baba prefers the complete package. Otunba
was titillated by Miss Titi, and today, the rest is history.
-The Apesin (He Whom They Gather To Worship) of Ijebuland is father of eight children (see pictures on our website):
-
Ms. Adetutu Oyindamola Emilia (first child & daughter, sociology-graduate, Yoruba-movie addict, former executive board member (Conoil), concierge shopping expert, & Atlanta, Georgia-based fashion retailer. One of her most memorable days was when she met Christian Louboutin, the French luxury shoe and bag designer who autographed her emerald shoes in New York. She was so overjoyed she found it hard to wear them. She loves cooking and a quiet life). Her website http://www.imaginativeusa.com/home.html Her blog: http://imaginativeshopping.blogspot.com/2. Prince Michael ‘Bobo ‘Babajide (his first son and executive director, Conoil). Hear him: “I have a lot of respect for my Dad, but I’ve always been very ambitious, I’ve always had my own dreams and aspirations in different ventures. For instance, when I was in the university, I took classes in Filmmaking because I have plans to go into film production in future. But for now, that is not in line with the family business. However, that’s something I want to do later in life as a person. So, in addition to what the old man has been able to put on ground, I also have these goals I want to achieve and I believe that one must give them a try.” On how he manages to combine his dad’s and his own private business, he says: “It’s very possible; it can be done. Don’t forget I’m still a director in Conoil; I just want to take some time out to launch the business. When you bring a business and people accept it, all you do is to create more awareness and ensure that it gets to the consumers through adverts and promotional campaigns. Once that is done, you have little work to do. Meanwhile, we can still tie everything into the family business, but this time around, I want to get the business running first.”
3.
Tunde ‘Paddy’Abolade. A car freak, he is the Group Executive Director,
Globacom. He sure cherishes the limelight. While cruising out of Awolowo
Boat Club in his black Porsche Carrera, he once gave out a sum of
N5,000 to a physically-challenged beggar.
4. Abimbola Beenu,
-
Belinda ‘Bella’ Olubunmi Ajoke (got married to Jameel Adetokunboh Disu in a fairytale wedding in April 2010. The first time they met, she introduced herself as ‘Bunmi Marquis’, and did not reveal her identity as Otunba’s gal), she is also the Group Executive Director, and one of his buildings, Bella Place on Ligali Ayorinde Street, Victoria Island Extension was named after her. He did name a lot of things after her. Once obese (runs in the family), she said she was able to shed the excess fat because of the tenacity she learnt from her dad who used to call her Benbe (chubby). She says he doesn’t joke with his exercises, and hits the gym by 1.am everyday, he used to play squash a lot but stopped after an accident. She entered university at the age of 14.
-
Eniola ‘EnnyBoy’,
-
Folashade ‘ShadyGirl’,
-
Adeniyi ‘NiyiBoy’.But there is one thing he does not do to his children: over-indulge them. He taught them to be hardworking and trained them to use their brains and not rely on anyone. His daughter, Bella, very much attests to this. And with all his towering wealth, his friends describe him as a shy and humble personality, and would bow down to most people while greeting.
-With
Orji Uzor Kalu, former Abia State Governor, they handled government
contracts, did general merchandise and were into arms deals & oil
trading. Now you understand Kalu’s outbursts against Obasanjo. Connect
the dots.
-Adenuga
abhors politics but he is willing to support any government of the day.
He likes minding his business but over time, he has been hounded by
some politicians who feel he could use his enormous wealth to their
disadvantage. A classic example has been given above.
-Orji
Uzor Kalu (also a Taurus) says of him: “We have been friends from a
long time. I became Aliko’s friend right in the early ‘80s when I was a
student at the University of Maiduguri. With Mike, our friendship
started when he was living close to me on 6A Adeleke Adedoyin Street in
Victoria Island, Lagos. This is where all of us came to become friends.
Dangote and Mike were not close, but I was close to both of them. I was a
kind of bridge between two of them.” Kalu was later rusticated from
UNIMAID and had to sell palm oil on the streets of Maiduguri but that is
another story for another day. For now, Iyaniwura is focusing on The
Bull.
-In
December 1982, armed robbers attacked him in his residence and he
sustained some bullet wounds. In a confused and tense atmosphere, an
argument broke out among the robbers, with Adenuga still groaning on the
floor and moaning in the pool of his own blood. A defiant robber said:
“Let’s finish the job. We have to finish this job. We must kill him. We
must kill him.” Then he pulled the trigger. What happened after is
divulged in his biography. That experience left a lasting impact on him.
-He
has many nicknames and descriptions. He is called the Bull. The Guru.
Another is ‘Agbowokariowona’ which roughly translates to mean ‘the one
who piles up money only to distribute without any stress’. Erinfolawolu:
The elephant which strides into the town with all majesty and candour.
-Agbelesona bi Oyinbo: He who resides at home while spinning wonders
like the whites. -Apesinola of Ijebuland. He is also known as Aneye Toto
(Fine Boy), a nickname that was known only to his closes friends and
relatives until KSA released the song in his honour. That reminds me,
Foli Peperempe also waxed a nice one for him: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BPTM-RjvfZA
-He was the President of the Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE).
-As
a matter of necessity, he makes use of his private jet. His daughter
Bella, says: “My dad is very busy. Usually when he attempts to fly
commercial, he misses the flight about three times before he makes the
flight. So the best means for him is to fly on his private jet.” Encomium magazine
reported that he owns a French-made Dassault Falcon 7X jet, the first
fly-by-wire business jet in the world. If that is correct, it is amazing
as I know only one other Nigerian using a Falcon 7X, and he is none
other than President Jonathan. You can pick one too, it is just N8
billion.
–He was mightily eulogised by juju maestro, King Sunny Ade in his Mike Adenuga. In more than a quarter of an hour, KSA sang the praise of the ‘Chairman of Chairmen’ in his five-tracker, Ayo Owuro (Morning Joy). In it, KSA hammers on the fact that Adenuga is imbued with aje (acumen), owo (money), ola (wealth) and iyi (influence). You can gbeyen lura here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUYLBNjAB_Y
-A
courageous entrepreneur, he makes grand and eloquent statements with
his architectural masterpieces. Some of these include his Mike Adenuga
Towers, Victoria Island, Lagos. Currently, he is erecting an edifice of
gargantuan proportions on Banana Island, one of Nigeria’s most expensive
and choiciest areas. The new palatial residence has an office for the
Bull, watchtowers, mosque, swimming pool, church, helipad, multipurpose
hall (for 200 people) and a yacht platform.
-A
visionary moneybag, he is not limiting his conquest to Africa. He
actually wants to take over the world. A sum of $1 billion is already
set aside to penetrate the Indian market. When you know that there are
1.2 billion people in India, then you know what’sup! Interestingly, he
has over 150 Indians working for him (I still think that angle is
somehow, what happened to 150 Nigerians? Abi na #winks). He intends to
make India his launchpad to take over all of Asia. And that, if you ask
me, makes a lot of economic sense! In his quest for expansion, Otunba
has also made solid connections with international partners as Cable
& Wireless, Belgacom, Link Africa and France Telecom. And in case
you didn’t know, he is the first man in the world to single-handedly
float a mass consumer telecommunications company, (Globacom).
-But
for a man who believes that charity begins at home, he has invested
over $3billion in Nigeria and created jobs for thousands of Nigerians
(and many more indirectly).
-His
royal insignia is the bull, with his buildings graced by golden bull
statues and all his letters are written on golden-bull embroidered
paper. There is a life-sized bronze statue of a bull in a ‘water
fountain with architectonic drop-off glass canopy’ at his Mike Adenuga
Towers while his Conoil Plc. Headquarters in Marina, Lagos Island is
called the Bull Plaza. Even his new sprawling mansion on Banana Island
has golden bull statues. If you are lucky enough to have his
complimentary card, a golden image of a bull is stamped on it. The door
to his office bears a golden imprint of the bull and even on the lower
left corner of Glo’s website, you will see the bull. Mike ‘The Bull’
Adenuga. The bull has been a significant part of human culture since
time immemorial. One of the zodiac signs is Taurus. Now here is my own
theory…lol!>>>Since the Guru himself was born on the 29th
of April, that makes him a Taurus (21 April-21 May). Taurus is the
Latin name for bull. According to astrologers (and those who believe in
them), those in Taurus possess the following features: patience,
reliability, greed, possessiveness, extreme determination, warm
heartedness. They are also described as security-loving, steadfast,
unshaken in the face of troubles, law-abiding, peace-loving, sensitive
to material values and possessions and possess a ‘horror of falling into
debt’. Astrology-Online describes them further: ‘They are faithful
and generous friends with a great capacity for affection, but rarely
make friends with anyone outside their social rank, to which they are
ordinarily excessively faithful. In main, they are gentle,
even-tempered, good-natured, modest and slow to anger, dislike
quarreling and avoid ill-feeling.’ But, they can explode beyond
control in anger in some situations. As I have said, it is for those who
believe in astrology. But I will advise you don’t stand in the way of a
raging bull. Some Spanish matadors did not live to tell the story. In
Canada, 42% of all livestock fatalities are caused by bulls (can weigh
up to 1,000kg), and less than 1 in 20 victims of a bull attack survives.
Iyaniwura wonders if Otunba Adenuga is a fan of Spanish tauromachy
(bullfighting). I think he does, with the way he describes himself:
“Essentially,
running a business is similar to leading a military operation or
orchestrating a political campaign, or performing as a great athlete.
The fundamental principles are the same. The overriding objective is to
out-manoeuvre the opposing forces; to outsmart the other party; to
outperform competition; to outwit the other guy-to achieve. This may
sound harsh. But that’s the way it is.”
-Awards, Honours & Titles: |
His awards are just too numerous but here are some of them:
-African Telecoms Award, 2007 (Maiden Edition, Lagos, Nigeria).
-Pillar
of Sports in Africa by the Confederation of African Football, CAF
General Assembly, Khartoum, Sudan, 2007. Do you remember another legend
from Ogun State who was the Pillar of Sports? Yes, Bashorun MKO.
-Officer
of the Order of the Niger (OON) by the Obasanjo government. He was
later given the Commander of the Order of the Niger (CON). And when
Nigeria turned 50, the Federal Government gave him the Special Golden
Jubilee Independence Anniversary Award, as one of the 50 pre-eminent
Nigerians.
-Grand Commander of the Order of the Niger (GCON) by President Goodluck Jonathan, Monday, 17th
September, 2012. Talk of Nigeria’s second highest national honour for
the second richest man in the country. Some prefer to call him the Grand
Commander of Business. He founded Devcom Merchant Bank (and launched
Equatorial Trust Bank just nine months later) when he was just 36.
-He
is an Ijebu man and contrary to the stereotypical assumption that Ijebu
people are stingy, Otunba Adenuga is one of Nigeria’s most generous
philanthropists. Dele Momodu, in his piece, narrates a story by Seyi
Roberts: “He’s one of the most generous people that I have ever met. He
doesn’t give and make noise about it. He does his giving quietly. I
remember one of our school friends who needed surgery in London. All the
man did was to tell Adenuga and he sponsored the operation with about
25,000 pounds and nobody knew, but the person told me.” The following
are some of his donations, many of which were made through his Mike
Adenuga Foundation. N150 million to the University of Nigeria, Nsukka.
Not too long ago, he doled out N500 million to the victims of flooding
in Bayelsa State. I can remember Governor Dickson saying the money would
be judiciously spent and that Adenuga was a Bayelsan. When there was
the Ikeja Cantonment explosions, he dropped N20 million.
-An
ardent supporter of sports, he recently gave the triumphant Super
Eagles a sum of $1 million (Keshi is still smiling, I’m sure) and when
Nigeria hired Berti Vogts of Germany as Super Eagles’ technical adviser,
it was Adenuga who single-handedly funded it.
-His
words: I have worked hard most of my life and I believe I have been
very fortunate; although I must say I am a great believer in the man who
said “The harder you work, the luckier you get.” ‘Africa has a real
wealth of opportunity. And who better to explore that opportunity than
young Africans themselves? ‘. He continues: ‘But if there is one thing
that I have learnt in business, it is that it never pays to make your
targets too small. There will be problems and roadblocks, but we will
deal with them in the same way as we have dealt every business challenge
we have ever faced. With a mind open to all possibilities, and with
clear focused determination.’
-He
has said that making money is not his goal but affecting the lives of
Nigerians positively. Hear him: “If I can be seen as adding value to
Nigerians, it is more fulfilling.” When he talks, he actually talks like
with tone of a billionaire and the swagger of the super-rich. Don’t ask
me how. Watch him here>>>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NaDOmOHldMk
Thank
you so very much for taking your time to read this. For those who may
be interested, his biography will be launched in April 2013 when he
turns 60. I am emphasizing this particularly for those interested in
becoming entrepreneurs. There is a section called the Path to Guru: 50 Entrepreneurship Lessons
(the epilogue) in the book where Otunba gave 50 lessons on his secrets
and the business principles that have worked so well for him. The last
(50th) of these reads thus: “Like all mavericks, the strength and secret
of the Guru is the ability to think out of the box, the ability to act
in unconventional ways that have brought about paradigm shifts.
Unconventional ideas provide the keys to innovation, to differentiation.
It is the magic sesame that opens the door leading to the path to the
Guru.” Thank you once again.
Source Iyaniwura
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