Nigerian
Aliko Dangote, here with his daughter Halima, is Africa's richest man. AFP
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Nigera's government has
hit back at the charity, Oxfam, after it condemned as "obscene" the
wealth accumulated by billionaires in the West African state.
BBC
Africa Live report continues:
The
charity said that the combined wealth of Nigeria’s five richest men - US$29.9bn
(£22.9bn) - could end extreme poverty in the country.
In
a statement, its Good Governance Programme Coordinator for Nigeria, Celestine
Okwudili Odo, said:
It is obscene that the richest Nigerian has amassed more money
than he can ever hope to spend in a country where five million people will
struggle to feed themselves this year. Extreme inequality is exacerbating
poverty, undermining the economy, and fermenting social unrest. Nigerian
leaders must be more determined in tackling this terrible problem.”
Nigeria's
Minister of State for Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, said she was
concerned about the "language, tone and style" of Oxfam's report, Inequality in Nigeria.
The
report said:
Nigeria’s
richest man earns 8,000 times more in one day than a poor Nigerian will spend
on basic needs in a year.
More
than 112 million people are living in poverty in Nigeria, yet the country’s
richest man would have to spend US$1 million a day for 42 years to exhaust his
fortune.
Despite
a rapidly growing economy, Nigeria is one of the few countries where the number
of people living in poverty increased, from 69 million in 2004 to 112 million
in 2010 - a rise of 69%.
The
number of millionaires increased by 44% during the same period.
In
her response, Ms Ahmed said:
The methodology used in the report also raises some questions:
is it for empirical or theoretical purposes? Oxfam needs to tell us in the
report what it intends to achieve, what data was gathered, where it was
gathered, the sample size and the uses of the data.
When I looked at the report, I was worried about certain
concepts, such as ‘Who are the elites?’"
Citing
Forbes magazine, Oxfam named the five richest Nigerians as:
●Aliko Dangote (net worth US$14.4bn)
●Mike Adenuga (net worth US$9.9 billion)
●Femi Otedola (net worth US$1.85 billion)
●Folorunsho Alakija (net worth US$1.55 billion) and
●Abdul Samad Rabiu (net worth US$1.1 billion).
The
five have not yet commented, but the MD of Nigeria's FSL Asset Management
Limited was quoted by the Vanguard newspaper as saying:
The report is not too far from the truth. There is no doubt that
there is so much poverty in the country, but I don’t think it is fair to the
people mentioned in the report because they are private businessmen, who have
built their wealth through hard work. The level of poverty is something that
should be addressed to the government.”
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