Africa's 'Youngest Billionaire' Abducted in Tanzania

The man said
to be Africa's youngest billionaire has been kidnapped by masked gunmen in
Tanzania's main city Dar es Salaam, police say.
Mohammed
Dewji, 43, was abducted outside a swanky hotel gym where he was going for his
routine morning workout.
Three people
have been arrested in connection with the incident and two of the abductors
were believed to be foreign nationals, police added.
The motive
for Mr Dewji's abduction is still unclear.
Financial
magazine Forbes puts his wealth at $1.5bn (£980m), and has described him as
Tanzania's only billionaire.
In a 2017
report, it said Mr Dewji was Africa's youngest billionaire.
Mr Dewji is
also a major sponsor of one of Tanzania's biggest football teams, Simba.
He promised
in 2016 to donate at least half his fortune to philanthropic causes,
Forbes said.
Mr Dewji,
locally known as Mo, is credited with turning his family business from a
wholesale and retail enterprise into a pan-African conglomerate, reports the
BBC's Athuman Mtulya from Dar es Salaam.
His company,
MeTL, has interests in textile manufacturing, flour milling, beverages and
edible oils in at least six African states.
Mr Dewji
served as a ruling party MP for a decade until 2015. He told the BBC in a 2014
interview that this possibly made it easier for him to meet top politicians,
but it did not give him an unfair advantage, as other businessmen also had
access to them.
Environment
Minister January Makamba, a friend of Mr Dewji, tweeted that he had spoken to
Mr Dewji's father and the family confirmed that he had been kidnapped.
Mohammed Dewji
has huge celebrity status in Tanzania. You would be hard pressed to find a
person in Dar es Salaam who did not know of Mohammed or the Dewji family and he
would often draw large crowds at public events.
But despite
his wealth and fame he has always been incredibly relaxed in his approach to
security - in fact all the Dewji family were.
He never
moved with security guards or bouncers and would often pop out to the gym on
his lunch break or to meet friends after work unaccompanied.
In his day
to day life he didn't look like a billionaire - he was a friendly, affable
young man going about his business.
The
abduction took place in the affluent neighbourhood of Oysterbay.
The
kidnappers fired shots in the air before driving away with the billionaire,
eyewitnesses said.
Mr Dewji, a
fitness enthusiast, had no security guards with him and had driven to the gym
on his own, Dar es Salaam regional police commissioner Paul Makonda told
reporters.
Two of the
kidnappers were white men, he added.
Security
personnel across Tanzania have been put on high alert in the hunt for the
abductors, police said.
The city's
name comes from Arabic, and literally means Abode of Peace. And Dar es Salaam
is very safe, in comparison to Lagos or Johannesburg, the main cities in
Nigeria and South Africa respectively.
Although
Tanzania has seen a wave attacks and abductions of opposition politicians and
perceived government critics, this is the first time a businessman of Mr
Dewji's standing has been kidnapped in the country.
Businessmen
have never felt at risk of being kidnapped and they often move around on their
own. Some may have chauffeurs, but not bodyguards. So Mr Dewji's abduction has
come as a huge shock.
From .bbc.com/news/world-africa-
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