Recently, the list of Africa’s wealthiest individuals was released. In the report, one of the African billionaires who moved up the ranks was Tanzanian business tycoon Mohammed Dewji, popularly known as Mo Dewji. The news that Mo Dewji climbed the list of wealthiest people on the African continent from the 15th position to the 10th, according to the latest Forbes ranking, came as good news to many, considering what the young African billionaire went through about three years ago. In 2016, the Tanzanian billionaire and philanthropist signed a Giving Pledge where he promised to donate more than half of his wealth to the less privileged in Tanzania and Africa at large. Despite his pledge, which he has lived up to over the years, Dewji has maintained a wealth portfolio to the tune of 1.6 billion U.S. dollars. In 2022, Mo Dewji was ranked by Forbes as the fifteenth wealthiest man in Africa. But many financial analysts predicted that his position on the rankings would experience a stiff decline in the coming years owing to the major setback he faced a couple of years prior. The Tanzania mogul, who maintains a status as the youngest billionaire in the African continent, has bounced back even stronger after the setback and looks more focused on achieving bigger goals. But what setback did Mo Dewji experience, and how did he bounce back after three years? Who is Mo Dewji? Mo Dewji is a Tanzanian billionaire and the president of Mohammed Enterprise Tanzania Ltd (MeTL). At 46 years, he is currently the youngest African billionaire according to Forbes and the only billionaire from East Africa who appeared in the recent Forbes 2023 list of wealthiest people in Africa. According to official information released by MeTL, Mo created 7,000 new jobs in 2022, and the number brought the total number of people under his employment to 35,000 from 28,000 in 2021. Mo Dewji grew up in Singida, a town in central Tanzania. He studied finance and international business, and theology at Georgetown University in the United States of America. From a young age, he has always aimed to be wealthy. “I learned that what is important is how much impact you make in society, the jobs that you create and the lives that you touch,” he was quoted as saying during an interview last year. He is currently the CEO of MeTL, a Tanzanian conglomerate founded by his father in the early 1970s. Under MeTL, he manages more than 126 independent companies in the food, agriculture, textiles, and manufacturing – where he has 40 industries. What Setback Did Mo Dewji Experience? In October 2018, news broke that Tanzanian billionaire Mohammed Dewji was kidnapped in the early hours of the morning during his routine morning exercise outside a hotel gym in the country’s main city. The news created panic across the continent and sparked a huge manhunt across Tanzania. Although he was released after 9 days in captivity, many analysts predicted that the trauma from the near-death experience would affect the business prospects of the young billionaire. In his first media interview after his release, a visibly disjointed Dewji recalled the incident saying he begged the kidnappers to take his life. “I was blindfolded and there were times they kept on threatening me with guns to my head and five days, six days into it I was thinking I was losing my eyesight,” Mr. Dewji told the BBC. “[The kidnapper] was like ‘I’m going to shoot you’ and I was like ‘you can shoot me and kill me’, because I was losing it. You get disoriented; you’re tired, because it’s a form of torture. I kept hearing these chopper noises and thinking that maybe this chopper’s looking for me.” The Great News The news that Mo Dewji had bounced back even stronger and was climbing higher on the ladder of wealthiest people in the continent came as great news to Africans. Known for his philanthropic works, Mr. Dewji is viewed as a role model for youths across the African continent. Top 10 Wealthiest people in Africa and their Networth In 2020, the African economy saw a 2.1 per cent decline. However, African billionaires saw their fortune increase by more than 12 per cent, much like their peers in the rest of the globe. 1. Aliko Dangote (Nigeria) Net worth: $11.3 billion The richest man in Africa and recipient of several honors is Aliko Dangote. He is often referred to as Africa’s undeniable cement king. Aliko Dangote hopes to impact the African oil market with his audacious, insane, and ambitious $12 billion Dangote oil refinery project in Lagos. The Dangote oil refinery, when finished, will be the biggest in the world, generating more than 650,000 BPD. A urea production facility with a 3 million metric ton annual capacity will also be part of the refinery. Dangote also became wealthy by purchasing shares of publicly listed sugar and salt producers. 2. Nassef Sawiris (Egypt) Net worth: $8.12 billion Nassef is among the wealthiest individuals in Africa, together with his brothers Naguib and Samih. The leader of Orascom Constructions, which was established when the Orascom conglomerate was divided into other firms, he is the youngest of the three brothers. His most significant asset is a 6% interest in Adidas AG (ETR: ADS). The English football team Aston Villa was purchased by the NSWE business, which is equally controlled by Nassef and American billionaire Wes Edens. 3. Nicky Oppenheimer (South Africa) Net worth: $8 billion Nicky Oppenheimer hails from a powerful family that has influenced South Africa’s corporate environment. More than three generations of Oppenheimer’s family have worked in the diamond mining industry. Ernest Oppenheimer, Nicky’s great-grandfather, founded Anglo-American Plc, the greatest producer of platinum in the world. DeBeers, a firm that mines and trades diamonds and is owned by Anglo-Americans (85%) and the government of Botswana (15%), has Nicky Oppenheimer as its chairman. Also the wealthiest individual in South Africa is Nicky Oppenheimer. 4. Mike Adenuga (Nigeria) Net worth: $6.1 billion The second-largest telecom services provider in Nigeria, Globacom, which has over 43 million members, is the primary source of income for Mike Adenuga. He also has stock in the companies Conoil and Equitorial Trust Bank. With the help of all these endeavors, he rose to the position of second richest man in Nigeria. Adenuga used to own a cab business while attending Pace University in the United States. Adenuga began various side hustles in the early years of his career, engaging in menial tasks like selling lace and distributing soft beverages. 5. Abdulsamad Rabiu (Nigeria) Net worth: $5.5 billion Due to his conglomerate, BUA group, which includes holdings in manufacturing, infrastructure, and agricultural, Abdulsamad Rabiu is one of the well-known individuals in the Nigerian business sector. Nigeria is one of the nations that produces the most crude oil worldwide. However, it relies on oil imports since there aren’t enough oil refineries, which creates a massive imbalance that strains Nigeria’s economy. In September 2020, Rabiu and Axen, the largest hydrocarbon firm in France, agreed to work together to provide processing technologies for Rabiu’s oil refinery in Akwa Ibom, Nigeria. This audacious action elevates the BUA group to the ranks of the most formidable powers in Nigeria and Africa. Additionally, Rabiu owns 98.5% of BUA Cement Plc, the second-largest cement manufacturer and a publicly traded corporation on the Nigerian Stock Exchange. 6. Issad Rebrab (Algeria) Net worth: $4.8 billion The majority of Issad Rebrab’s wealth has come from his work in the food sector through his firm Cevital, making him the richest man in Algeria. Cevital was started in 1998 by Rebrab. Cevital Algeria is the country’s largest conglomerate, with operations in the automobile, home appliance, transportation (by land and water), float glass manufacture, and massive retail sectors. Before starting the Cevital company, Rebrab founded a number of other companies in the accounting, steel, and metal sectors. Rebrab has also expanded his clientele by acquiring a number of businesses in South America, Africa, and Europe. Issad was sentenced to eight months in prison in April 2019 on counts of corruption, tax crimes, banking offenses, and customs violations. 7. Naguib Sawiris (Egypt) Net worth: $3.2 billion One of the richest families in Egypt is Naguib Sawiris’. He now serves as the company’s chairman. Orascom Telecom Holdings has developed into one of the most prosperous telecom businesses on the continent of Africa while being managed by Naguib. Additionally, he established the Weather Investment Group, which eventually acquired the Italian telecom firm Wind Telecomunicazioni S.p.A. Veon, which has operations in 20 countries and serves 181 million users, is the sixth-largest mobile telecommunications company in the world by the number of subscribers following the 2011 merger of Wind telecom and Global Telecom holdings with VimpelCom. Through his assets in Media Globe, Naguib also has an 88% ownership position in Euronews. 8. Patrice Motsepe (South Africa) Net worth: $3 billion The mining industry was the source of Patrice Motsepe’s wealth. In Johannesburg, Motsepe began his legal career at Bowman Gilfillan. Later that year, in 1997, he established African Rainbow Minerals, a company that engages in the extraction and refinement of minerals, including gold, ferrous metals, base metals, and platinum. Recently, he was nominated to serve as the Confederation of African Football’s president (CAF). The BRICS Business Council, Harmony Gold, and Sanlam are just a few of the notable African firms on whose boards he serves. Motsepe became the first black African billionaire to appear on the Forbes list in 2008. In 2013, Patrice Motsepe committed to giving half of his wealth to charitable organizations by signing the Giving Pledge. 9. Mohamed Mansour (Egypt) Net worth: $2.5 billion Mohamed Mansour is in charge of the Mansour Group, a family-run business, alongside his brother Youseff. Mansour Group was founded by Mr. Loutfy Mansour, who came from modest beginnings. His three sons have grown the company to a $7.5 billion conglomerate that operates in a variety of industries, including banking, real estate, education, healthcare, transportation, and logistics. Mansour Group is present in more than 100 countries and has the exclusive rights to produce and distribute goods for a number of multinational corporations. During the Hosni Mubarak era, Mohamed Mansour also served as Egypt’s Minister of Transportation from 2006 until 2009. 10. Mohammed Dewji (Tanzania) Net worth: $1.6 billion METL (Mohammad Enterprises Tanzania Limited), a Tanzanian corporation established by Mohammed Dewji’s father in the 1970s, is led by Mohammed Dewji as CEO. Dewji initially made news after he was abducted in Darussalam (Tanzania) in October 2018, however he was freed after 9 days. In eastern, southern, and central Africa, METL produces textiles, mills grains, brews drinks, and produces edible oils. METL now works in six nations in Africa, with plans to open up operations in more than a few. Dewji, the lone billionaire in Tanzania, joined the Giving Pledge in 2016, pledging to give at least half of his wealth to charitable causes.