Africa's Richest Woman, Folorunsho Alakija Speaks of Her Wealth and Relationship with Mayram Babangida

Africa’s Richest Woman, Folorunsho Alakija Speaks of Her Wealth and Relationship with Mayram Babangida

Inspiration

Apostle Folorunsho Alakija, adjudged Africa’s richest women, has spoken of her wealth and her relationship with Mrs Mayram Babangida.

The billionaire oil magnate gave the expose on an interview with Arise TV as part of her 70th birthday celebration which took place on the 15th of July.

Alakija regretted that people attribute her success and acquisition of an oil block to the late First Lady.

She stressed that the only thing Mrs Babangida did for her was to facilitate her meetings with the then Petroleum Minister.

Narrating her journey to fortune, Folorunsho Alakija said she met a family friend on an international flight and while discussing, the friend told her that she would be needing her help when she returned to Nigeria.

The friend told her that she had reached out to some other friends for the same assistance and that she would contact her if those people’s assistance did not come through.

Folorunsho Alakija’s story:

“‘We got back to Nigeria and she came knocking at my door, gave me some documents. She had some clients that were looking to lift crude oil form Nigeria and she wondered whether I might be able to speak to some of my clients, one of whom is the late Mrs Babangida. I said Okay, I would go and see her and see how she can help.

I got there and she (Mrs Babangida) said Okay, I can book an appointment for you to see the Petroleum Minister. I went to see the Petroleum Minister. What they (my family friend) wanted was to lift crude and the Petroleum Minister said Listen, the current administration at the time really wanted to move away from that and prefer Nigerians to be more involved in that rather than giving that out to foreigners.”

The Minister at that time told her that if the people for whom she needed assistance wanted to invest in the sector, they were free to do so.

She returned to her friend but the latter told her she was not longer interested in investing the oil sector.

So we parted ways. I said to myself, now that I have an inroad to that place, why don’t I find something I can do. All I wanted was a contract to boost my pocket. I still wanted to carry on doing my fashion, I love it.

So I went back. I asked Mrs Babangida to help me book another appointment and I went to see the Minister and I told him that I was interested in finding something to do with the NNPC. I was given all soughts of different options- catering for those offshore, transporting crude from one location to another, stuffs like that.

So, I would sit down, write my letter and take it there. Sometimes I had to wait six months to get the appointment. Sometimes four months. I would go back and he would punch holes in what I had come to offer and I would go back, dejected, and I would go and do some more homework and then I would get Mrs Babangida to book another appointment.

After she got several ‘No’ from people, she decided one day that she was tired of all the rejection she was getting and was determined to try for the last time.

”I came back home and I cried my eyes out. My husband comforted me and I called Mrs Babangida and I said this is what I came back with and she said, well, all she knows is that that kind of thing takes years and we left it at that and I carried on licking my wounds.

”I decided I was going to go back. So I called Mrs Babangida and I said Please, I would like that you please book me one more appointment and she did. She was kind but that was all that she did concerning this license matter. She kept on getting me those appointments and the rest was what God wanted to do.

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So I went back and I said to the Minister that I really wanted to apply for this. He said okay, you go and do your homework because it is Nigerians that the government of the day wants to encourage now. We have had a lot of multinationals over the years. We want to encourage Nigerians. We want our resources and our wealth in our own land rather than have it carted away by foreigners all the time.

I applied for the license three times and that took three years. The Ministers changed hands twice and it was doing the time of the last one that I eventually got it.

Mrs Alakija said she then became one of the first women to be given a license in the country.

I think I was one of the women to get the license and it is very painful when you listen to what people say that ‘oh it’s because she made blouses for Mrs Babangida’, ‘Oh it’s because she was one of them’.

How about all the others who got all the license and who weren’t in the oil industry at the time that they got the license? So because they are men, they have two heads? Is it fair on womanhood? Why relegate us to the background? Why say we can’t when we can? When all the prerequisites could be ticked, I made all of them available. I had technical partners, I went here and there. I supplied everything. I did my homework. I leant on the job, I went for courses as well, to build me up, to be able to seat in the board room and face others.”