Mohammed Dewji: Reward offered for abducted Tanzania billionaire
- Published
The family of Tanzanian billionaire Mohammed Dewji, who was kidnapped on Thursday, has offered a 1bn Tanzania shilling ($440,000; £330,000) reward for information that leads to his rescue.
Mr Dewji, reportedly Africa's youngest billionaire, was taken by masked gunmen in the Tanzanian city of Dar es Salaam.
The police have arrested more than 20 people in connection with the abduction
But both the motive for the kidnapping and his whereabouts are still unclear.
Police believe that two white men were behind Mr Dewji's disappearance, reports the BBC's Athuman Mtulya from Dar es Salaam.
The family hoped that the reward will help the police's investigation, spokesperson Azim Dewji told a packed press conference.
"We want to assure anyone with the information about the whereabouts of our son to come forward and we will treat their information as secret," he said.
Kidnappings are uncommon in Tanzania, our correspondent says.
Who is Mohammed Dewji?
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, 43, 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, external 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.
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.
What more do we know about his abduction?
The abduction took place outside a swanky gym 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 on Thursday.
- Published25 March 2014
- Published2 May 2023