TRENDING
[UPDATED] Papiri School Abduction: Court Sentences Five Linked To Attack To 25 Years Imprisonment • Hizi hapa bajeti za Tanzania,Kenya, Uganda na Rwanda • JIgawa court begins hearing on APC House of Reps primary election petition • Why Ado/Okpokwu/Ogbadibo Constituency backed state police – Rep Philip Agbese • JAN urges youths to shift from beneficiaries to builders • Ethiopian PM, Zambia’s President headline 100 Most Notable Africans Awards in Morocco • Nigeria crude output hits 1.53mbpd, ends 10-month OPEC quota drought • NLO limits playoffs signings to five non-league players • [JUST IN] Papiri School Abduction: Court Sentences Five Linked To Attack To 25 Years Imprisonment • Nigerians now among world’s hungriest people — Peter obi slams Tinubu • Tinubu urges FCT residents, business owners to pay tax, ground rent • Ogun assembly trains workers, assures sustaining quarterly capacity building • Bunge la Seneti lapunguza makali muswada wa uhusiano wake na Tanzania • Senate extends 2025 Budget implementation to September • FG Declares June 12 Public Holiday, Reaffirms Commitment to Democratic Ideals • Ghana attracting bad actors through ECOWAS free movement system — GIS laments abuse • Anti-LGBTQ bill: 'It's not true that Parliament cannot reconsider a passed bill' — Speaker Bagbin • 'Your citizens will still leave our country' — South African activist fires back at World Cup opposition • New NAIMOS Operations Director pledges stronger fight against galamsey • Senate orders Police, DSS to track online criminals • [UPDATED] Papiri School Abduction: Court Sentences Five Linked To Attack To 25 Years Imprisonment • Hizi hapa bajeti za Tanzania,Kenya, Uganda na Rwanda • JIgawa court begins hearing on APC House of Reps primary election petition • Why Ado/Okpokwu/Ogbadibo Constituency backed state police – Rep Philip Agbese • JAN urges youths to shift from beneficiaries to builders • Ethiopian PM, Zambia’s President headline 100 Most Notable Africans Awards in Morocco • Nigeria crude output hits 1.53mbpd, ends 10-month OPEC quota drought • NLO limits playoffs signings to five non-league players • [JUST IN] Papiri School Abduction: Court Sentences Five Linked To Attack To 25 Years Imprisonment • Nigerians now among world’s hungriest people — Peter obi slams Tinubu • Tinubu urges FCT residents, business owners to pay tax, ground rent • Ogun assembly trains workers, assures sustaining quarterly capacity building • Bunge la Seneti lapunguza makali muswada wa uhusiano wake na Tanzania • Senate extends 2025 Budget implementation to September • FG Declares June 12 Public Holiday, Reaffirms Commitment to Democratic Ideals • Ghana attracting bad actors through ECOWAS free movement system — GIS laments abuse • Anti-LGBTQ bill: 'It's not true that Parliament cannot reconsider a passed bill' — Speaker Bagbin • 'Your citizens will still leave our country' — South African activist fires back at World Cup opposition • New NAIMOS Operations Director pledges stronger fight against galamsey • Senate orders Police, DSS to track online criminals
Kano, not Lagos, built foundations of Dangote, Rabiu’s success — Sanusi
Back to Home

Kano, not Lagos, built foundations of Dangote, Rabiu’s success — Sanusi

Daily Post about 2 hours 2 mins read

The Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II, has challenged recent remarks by Vice President Kashim Shettima, insisting that Kano, not Lagos, nurtured the business foundations of Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, and billionaire industrialist Abdul Samad Rabiu.

Sanusi made the remarks while addressing members of the Institute of Chartered Secretaries and Administrators of Nigeria (ICSAN), where he underscored Kano’s long-standing reputation as a commercial hub and a cradle of entrepreneurial success.

According to the Emir, both Dangote and Rabiu emerged from Kano’s deep-rooted trading tradition before expanding their business empires across Nigeria and beyond.

“These businessmen went to Lagos to expand their businesses and learn from the commercial environment there, not to learn how to do business from the beginning,” Sanusi said.

He noted that Kano has historically produced generations of successful merchants and entrepreneurs, arguing that the state’s commercial heritage played a significant role in shaping some of Africa’s most prominent business figures.

The Emir’s comments are widely seen as a response to remarks made by Shettima during the Invest Lagos Summit 3.0 on Monday.

At the summit, the Vice President praised Lagos State’s economic environment and leadership, stating that Lagos was responsible for producing Africa’s richest individual.

“Lagos produced Africa’s richest man, not Kano. Aliko Dangote is a Lagos boy. Likewise, it was not Kano that produced Africa’s second-richest man, Abdul Samad Rabiu,” Shettima said.

The Vice President made the statement while emphasising Lagos State’s contribution to Nigeria’s economy and its role in fostering private-sector growth and wealth creation.

Sanusi’s response has since sparked renewed debate over the respective contributions of Kano and Lagos to the development of some of Nigeria’s most influential business leaders, reflecting a broader discussion about the country’s commercial history and economic identity.

Kano, not Lagos, built foundations of Dangote, Rabiu’s success — Sanusi

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!

Niger Delta

View All
AD
OneClick Africa Logo

Africa's premier digital hub for impactful news, entertainment, and business insights.

© 2026 OneClick Africa. All rights reserved.