Tuesday, 21 November 2023

Billionaire Lakshmi Mittal’s brother gets $500 million Nigerian aid to settle contract dispute

Pramod Mittal’s firm won a settlement tied to a Soviet-era steel plant that has sucked up more than $7 billion in Nigerian public investment without producing any metal.

Nigerian government has agreed to pay near $500 million to Laksjhi Mittal's younger brother Pramod Mittal's company to settle contract dispute tarnished by fraud.

Nigerian government has agreed to pay near $500 million to Laksjhi Mittal's younger brother Pramod Mittal's company to settle contract dispute tarnished by fraud. 

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Billionaire Lakshmi Mittal’s younger brother is effectively getting a helping hand — and a possible way out of financial distress — from Nigerian taxpayers, after the country’s government agreed to pay his company almost $500 million to settle a contract dispute over a deal that a previous administration said was tarnished by fraud. 

Pramod Mittal, whose career in the steel industry has been less glittering than his better-known sibling — the tycoon behind the €20 billion ($21.2 billion) ArcelorMittal SA conglomerate —, has a string of abandoned factories and a trail of unpaid debts to his name. Five years ago, his Isle of Man-registered Global Steel Holdings Ltd., or GSH, was put into liquidation over $167 million owed to Moorgate Industries Ltd., a company spun off from one of the world’s biggest steel traders.

As a UK court weighed Moorgate’s request to declare Pramod personally bankrupt three years ago, the London-based Indian national held out the prospect of a payout from the Nigerian state to clear his debt. The judge was unconvinced at the time, but the settlement subsequently reached with Nigeria last year now looks like the 67-year-old’s best route out of insolvency. Still, while payments from the Nigerian government have reached GSH’s liquidators, as of Oct. 4, Moorgate had yet to see any of those funds despite having asked for them, court documents show.

With Pramod’s bankruptcy winding its way through English court rooms, a new Nigerian president has taken office, and last month his steel minister said one of the administration’s top priorities is to finally fire up the furnaces of the massive plant at the heart of the younger Mittal’s $496 million compensation. The government has justified the agreement with a former unit of Pramod’s GSH, which was announced in September 2022, saying it frees the state to pursue its ambitions for the sprawling 24,000-hectare (92 square mile) site.  

The settlement — representing about 1.5% of Nigeria’s foreign reserves — is just the latest twist in the saga of the vast Soviet-built factory complex begun 44 years ago. The project has sucked up more than $7 billion in public investment and has yet to produce any metal. The story of the Ajaokuta steel mill on the banks of the Niger River 190 kilometers south of the capital, Abuja, is often cited as emblematic of the corruption, poor governance and incompetence that bedevils the West African nation. The country’s most notorious white elephant still sparks passionate debate over whether it should be written off or revived.

“Ajaokuta has been a black hole that has gobbled up billions of dollars, enriching multiple generations of politicians and foreign enablers," says Matthew Page, a former Nigeria expert for US intelligence agencies and now an associate fellow at London-based Chatham House. “This last failed reboot — and the giant price tag that came with it — is a preview of the next failed re-concessioning attempt. At this point, Ajaokuta’s dilapidated machinery is capable of doing only one thing: making public funds disappear."

Neither Pramod’s representatives nor the spokespeople for the newly elected President Bola Tinubu and Steel Minister Shuaibu Audu responded to requests for comment. Abubakar Malami, Nigeria’s attorney general from 2015 to earlier this year, on whose watch the settlement was reached, said last year that the administration of former President Muhammadu Buhari “rescued the steel industry from interminable and complex disputes as well as saving the taxpayer from humongous damages."

Pramod’s Involvement

Pramod entered into the Ajaokuta picture in 2004, when then President Olusegun Obasanjo awarded GSH a series of contracts, including an arrangement first to manage and later to buy the steel mill.

Shortly after GSH took over the plant, Solgas Energy Ltd., a small US company, sued it in Texas. Solgas claimed that GSH discussed becoming Solgas’ subcontractor on Ajaokuta before breaching a confidentiality accord and bribing Nigerian officials, including one of Obasanjo’s sons, to “steal the concession." While the case was thrown out on jurisdictional grounds, in December 2008 a separate arbitration tribunal ordered Nigeria to pay Solgas $15.2 million in damages for the wrongful termination of the contract — while noting the US firm hadn’t provided evidence to support the corruption allegations.

By then, Umaru Yar’Adua had taken over as Nigeria’s president, and he canceled GSH’s contracts after a panel that his steel development minister set up said the concessions were rife with irregularities. GSH’s claim it had invested $200 million was “a ruse," the inspectors said. Rather, the company had used its Nigerian assets to borrow more than $192 million from local banks — funds they “strongly" suspected had been dispatched abroad, they said. 

The panel’s full report — never made public but seen by Bloomberg — said rescuing Ajaokuta was beyond the “financial, technical and experiential capabilities" of GSH, which instead had been “systematically cannibalizing, vandalizing and moving valuable equipment" out of the factory. GSH and its Nigerian unit initiated arbitration proceedings against the government and later entered mediation, which produced last year’s settlement.

Pramod had signed two earlier agreements with the Nigerian government – in 2014 and 2016 – that would have seen his firm retain the right to manage an idled state-owned iron ore mining company but receive no payout.

“I threatened them with criminal proceedings for tax evasion, in addition to other criminal infractions that they had clearly committed," Mohammed Adoke, a former attorney general who had reached the first of these accords, wrote in his memoir titled “Burden of Service." “To amicably resolve the issue, I insisted that Global Steel should relinquish (Ajaokuta) for free without any form of compensation." 

Adoke’s successor, Malami, who was the attorney general when the half-a-billion-dollar settlement was struck, modified the terms of the deal to take back the mining firm and award a payment. Malami didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Moorgate’s Case

Even before finalizing the Ajaokuta windfall, Pramod had suggested using the money to pay down the Moorgate debt. In June 2020, as Moorgate sought his bankruptcy, he told Judge Catherine Burton that GSH’s liquidators had failed to account for the “very real prospects of a payment" from Nigeria. He said his Abuja-registered subsidiary would settle the obligation to Moorgate “out of whatever money it receives from the mediation," according to the decision issued by Burton, who — unpersuaded — ruled in favor of the creditor. 

Pramod also tried another way to skirt bankruptcy — using an individual voluntary arrangement, or IVA. He proposed repaying less than £5 million out of £2.5 billion  ($3.1 billion) —  or 0.2% of what a handful of companies and individuals said they were owed by the businessman.

Moorgate countered that “friendly creditors" who approved this meager offer were either associated with Pramod or relying on loan agreements that were “not true or contemporaneous documents." A UK judge revoked the IVA last November, expressing “serious doubts" about the authenticity of the paperwork. In the IVA, Pramod said he was worth £117,000, claiming he didn’t control GSH. The family’s London mansion is held through an offshore company whose directors were senior managers at GSH.

Contrary to Pramod’s argument, the court determined he controlled the British Virgin Islands-registered company that owned GSH through his influence over a family trust, with an Isle of Man judge similarly describing him as that firm’s “driving force."

Pramod made other apparent attempts to distance himself from the group and its subsidiaries. Since April 2021, GSH’s Nigerian unit — the settlement’s beneficiary — has been owned by a Mauritian entity named Luminous Star Ltd., classified as defunct for a decade and with a director who was formerly a GSH employee. While Pramod ceased to be a director of the Nigerian firm in late 2020, his son sits on the board.

In January, Nigeria’s then Information Minister Lai Mohammed said the government had paid $446 million to GSH’s local unit in multiple instalments under the settlement. The law firm hired by the Nigerian subsidiary for the mediation made six transfers from these funds to GSH’s account, totaling £219 million ($272 million) between October 2022 and February 2023, according to reports filed by the company’s liquidators. The law firm, King & Spalding LLP, declined to comment on the rest of the money. 

In December and again in March, Moorgate asked to be paid out of funds recovered by GSH’s liquidators, according to a court decision issued last month in the Isle of Man. The liquidators, who estimate that only £40 million is available for creditors once GSH’s potential tax liability and additional costs are taken into consideration, are yet to comply with the request, the judge said on Oct. 4, ruling that Moorgate is entitled to receive part-satisfaction of the debt. Moorgate and GSH’s liquidators declined to comment. 

Emulating Lakshmi

Like his brother Lakshmi, who built the world’s second-largest steel producer after splitting from the family business in the mid-1990s and embarking on a legendary deal-making spree, Pramod’s efforts also hinged on international acquisitions. As Lakshmi, the UK’s sixth-richest person, entered the wealth stratosphere, his brother sought to emulate him.

In 2004, Lakshmi’s daughter got married in a lavish ceremony at Versailles, France. Nine years later, the younger Mittal spent £50 million on his daughter’s wedding in Barcelona, according to Moneylife, an Indian media outlet, and Spanish news site Vanitatis.  Pramod’s spokespeople didn’t comment on the figure. Just this year, Pramod’s son got married to his long-term partner in a “multi-million pound ceremony" at a five-star UK hotel, the Daily Mail reported. 

Pramod’s steel ambitions took him not only to Nigeria, but also to Bosnia, Bulgaria, Libya, Zimbabwe and the Philippines where his companies ran up nearly a billion dollars in debts. During the mid-2000s expansion, GSH agreed to take a loan of up to $35 million from an offshore company owned by his brother Lakshmi, board meeting minutes show. Neither Lakshmi nor the group he heads “have any business connection to the investments" of Pramod, a spokesperson for ArcelorMittal said by email.

In the Philippines, GSH bought a shuttered steel plant in 2004. Within five years, activity at the facility stopped amid a legal battle, with lenders claiming Pramod’s firm had defaulted and the company accusing the banks and liquidator of reneging on an obligation to clear tax arrears. In Bulgaria, where GSH failed to turn around a communist-era steelmaker, a Sofia court put the company owning the mill into bankruptcy in 2008 after it defaulted on a Є325 million bond. 

Authorities in Bosnia-Herzegovina arrested Pramod in July 2019 and charged him in January this year with “heading an organized crime group." Prosecutors alleged that GSH “illegally appropriated" about $11.5 million from a manufacturer of iron-ore smelting coke that the firm took control of in 2003. In a statement following his detention, GSH said the “complaints are categorically false," according to Mumbai-based news outlet Global Prime News. Pramod was released on bail shortly after being questioned and has not returned to Bosnia. He and his family have initiated arbitration proceedings against the Bosnian state.

Meanwhile, in Nigeria, the attachment of the country’s leaders to the Ajaokuta plant shows no sign of abating, even though critics including the World Bank have called the facility obsolete. President Tinubu pledged during his election campaign to get the steel mill up and running. His predecessor’s government, which left office in May, congratulated itself not only for liberating Ajaokuta from Pramod’s legal claim but also securing it for a settlement significantly smaller than the $5.3 billion that GSH had apparently demanded.

Just last month, touting the potential of the complex to one day create half a million jobs, Vice President Kashim Shettima said the “Ajaokuta plant can be a game changer for the Nigerian nation."

Wednesday, 15 November 2023

Most Nigerian artists don’t want their kids to listen to their songs’ – ID Cabasa

By Sunny Green Itodo

Veteran record producer Olumide Ogunade, popularly known as ID Cabasa, has said most Nigerian artistes who are parents don’t approve of their kids listening to their music.

He said most artistes don’t want their kids to listen to their songs because of explicit lyrical content, stressing that most of them are just doing music to make ends meet.

Cabasa spoke in a recent episode of The Honest Bunch Podcast co-hosted by actor, Chinedu Ani Emmanuel, aka Nedu.

He said: “I can tell you that most artists in Nigeria that you see, they don’t want their kids to actually listen to their own songs. And don’t blame them.

“I don’t like apportioning blames because they people funding [music executives are behind what artists put out]. A lot of us are doing this thing [music] for survival. So, the question is how do you balance who you are with who they [music executives] want you to be?”

One Arsene Wenger Highbury era player is still playing professional football, he’s now 44-years old

Lucas Arnold

After Alex Song’s recent retirement, Junichi Inamoto is now the only former Arsenal player still playing from the Arsene Wenger Highbury era.

Junichi Inamoto, who signed for Arsenal from Gamba Osaka in 2001, did only play for the club on four occasions.

Kashiwa Reysol v Consadole Sapporo - J.League J1

Photo by Masashi Hara/Getty Images

But at 44-years-old, the former Japan international is still playing in his home country.

Inamoto is now playing for Nankatsu SC who are listed to be playing in the fifth tier of Japanese football.

After his spell at Arsenal, Inamoto did go on to have spells with several other British clubs including Fulham, West Bromwich Albion and Cardiff City.

Inamoto last played for France’s Stade Rennais in Europe, before heading back to Japan in 2010.

Junichi Inamoto became the first Japanese player to play for Arsenal

Inamoto was the first of four Japanese players to play for Arsenal to date.

Ryo Miyaichi was followed by Takuma Asano to the Emirates, and of course Takehiro Tomiyasu is now playing under Mikel Arteta today.

Miyaichi, a winger who signed for Arsenal in 2011, is now playing his football for Yokohama F. Marinos at the age of 30.

And Asano who signed five years later, is now playing for VfL Bochum in Germany at 29-years-old.

Junichi Inamoto’s Arsenal debut

Like a lot of Arsenal youngsters, Inamoto made his full Arsenal debut in the Carling Cup – as it was called at the time.

Inamoto played 84 minutes in a 2-0 win over Grimsby Town at Highbury.

Arsenal FC 'Iconic' Archive

Photo by Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC via Getty Images

However, Inamoto only lasted 45 minutes in the following round in a 4-0 away defeat to Blackburn Rovers.

That being said, Inamoto’s first Arsenal minutes did come as a substitute in the Champions League.

The Japan international played 14 minutes in a 3-2 home win against FC Schalke – a game in which Thierry Henry scored twice and Freddie Ljungberg scored the opener.

Arsene Wenger’s verdict on Junichi Inamoto’s Arsenal career

Arsene Wenger, the man to bring Inamoto to England, believed in the midfielder’s qualities, but felt he lacked belief as well as some physical attributes whilst at the club.

Speaking to Arsenal back in 2013, Wenger said: “He missed something.

“He had the basic quality but he missed something in the physical aspect, stamina, to be a box-to-box, up-and-down midfielder in the Premier League.

“Also at that time he lacked a little bit of belief in his qualities, because he was a very good footballer, Inamoto, but he was still in a period when the Japanese players didn’t feel they were at the level of the rest of the world.”

It is worth noting that Justin Hoyte, also of the Arsene Wenger Highbury era, hasn’t officially retired yet, but is now a free agent.

We will eliminate gas flaring in Nigeria by the end of 2023 – TotalEnergies MD

Omono Okonkwo

The Managing Director, TotalEnrgies has said the company will eliminate gas flaring activities by the end of 2023. He said this on November 14 at the ongoing 41st Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE) annual international conference and exhibition in Lagos state. 

According to Mathieu Bouyer, the Managing Director, by 2030, TotalEnergies plans to have an energy mix of gas at 50% petroleum products at 30%, electricity at 15%, and biomass and hydrogen at 5%.

He said the company is making plans to reduce global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from its oil and gas facilities by 40% by 2030.  

He said: 

“We are ramping up the solarization of energy sources in our facilities and host communities in Nigeria. From a modest generation of 0.12 megawatts (MW) in 2021 to 0.55 megawatts peak (MWp) in 2023 and with a target of 9.4 MWp by the end of 2025. We will eliminate routine flaring at our installations in Nigeria by the end of 2023.” 

“In this journey of energy transition, we recognize the strategic role of natural gas. Gas produces half the GHG emissions of coal for the generation of electricity.  It emits less GHG than oil for the same quality of energy and in its liquefied form (liquefied natural gas), it offers similar ease of storage and transport. 

“For more than a century, oil and gas have powered the socio-economic lives all-round the globe. However, it has been realized that the unintended consequences of uncontrolled and unsustainable generation, processing, and use of fossil fuels are far greater than previously thought.  

“Top on the list of these undesirable consequences is global warming with all its manifestations. Consequently, society has been responding by discouraging the generation and use of energy sources with high greenhouse gas, GHG emissions and high carbon footprints and promoting the use of cleaner and renewable energy sources.” 

What you should know

In October 2023, the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) said that TotalEnergies has fully funded all five Host Communities Development Trusts (HCDTs), totalling $15 million, showcasing their commitment to the host community. They are the first among International Oil Companies (IOCs) operating in Nigeria to achieve this milestone. 

Also, On November 12, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited brokered a peace deal between TotalEnergies and PENGASSAN as well as NUPENG after a strike action had taken place and restricted workflow at the company. The deal led to the restoration of 275,000 barrels of oil per day production at TotalEnergies.

Ethiopia’s oil billionaire, Al Amoudi’s net worth hits $8.5 billion

Ethiopia’s oil magnate, and one of Africa’s richest men, Mohammed Al Amoudi, has experienced a remarkable surge in his net worth, reaching $8.5 billion, marking a 61.9% increase in just 30 days.

According to data tracked on Bloomberg, Al Amoudi’s net worth started at $5.24 billion in the second week of October and has since seen a substantial rise of $3.25 billion as of November 14, 2023.

Al Amoudi, at 77, commands a portfolio of industrial assets spanning Sweden, Saudi Arabia, and Ethiopia, including Svenska Petroleum Exploration and Preem, Sweden’s largest oil refiner.

His holdings also extend to Midroc Gold in Ethiopia, the country’s leading miner, along with investments in hotels, an oil company, and agricultural ventures in coffee and rice.

The surge in net worth is closely linked to the robust performance of his industrial assets, particularly his stake in Preem, Sweden’s major energy company, with an annual refining capacity exceeding 18 million cubic meters of crude oil.

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As a prominent investor in Sweden and the beneficial owner of Preem, Al Amoudi is strategically positioned for success, with plans to divest his interest in Preem.

What you should know

Earlier in October Sweden’s Preem AB said it would curb the use of crude oil at the bigger of its two refineries from 2024, when it completes the revamp of a production unit.

The company’s investments, which include boosting production of fuels from feedstocks other than crude oil, won’t be affected by owner Mohammed Hussein Al Amoudi’s plans to initiate a review of the company that could include a possible sale.

Preem recently reported its strongest quarter, driven by exceptional performance in the Supply & Refining segment, fueled by robust international refining margins amid favorable market conditions.

In alignment with global emission-reduction targets, Preem, along with Shell Plc and Neste Oyj, plans to diminish crude oil usage in their refineries.

Preem’s Synsat unit in the Lysekil refinery is set to operate from mid-2024, aiming to reduce oil usage by up to 40% by utilizing alternative feedstocks like used cooking oil and animal fats.

Preem also signals a future shift towards sustainable aviation fuel production over renewable diesel.

Beyond Preem, Al Amoudi owns significant gold assets in Ethiopia, including Midroc Gold and the undeveloped Okote Gold Mine.

His oil ventures date back to the 1990s through Corral Petroleum, an energy-focused holding group, where he acquired Swedish energy companies and later took control of Morocco’s largest oil refineries.

Riyad Mahrez names the Man City duo that desperately wanted him not to leave this summer

'They made it clear': Riyad Mahrez names the Man City duo that desperately wanted him not to leave this summer

Srinivas Sadhanand

Al-Ahli superstar Riyad Mahrez has said that Pep Guardiola and Txiki Begiristain were keen on him staying at Manchester City this summer.

In an interview with French newspaper L’Equipe, Mahrez gave an insight into his decision to bid farewell to the club after winning the treble.

Riyad Mahrez says Pep Guardiola and Txiki Begiristain “really wanted” him to stay at Manchester City

In June, journalist Graeme Bailey revealed that the Algerian legend felt “hurt” about not partaking for Manchester City in either of their cup finals last season.

Despite becoming the first player to score a hat-trick in an FA Cup semi-final since 1958, the former Leicester City winger watched from the sidelines as the Sky Blues beat Manchester United 2-1 in the final.

Now, Riyad Mahrez has said that despite Pep Guardiola and Txiki Begiristain expressing their desire for him not to leave Manchester City, he felt the chance to join Al-Ahli was far too tempting for him to turn down.

“Txiki Begiristain really wanted me to stay at City and even Pep Guardiola. They made it clear to me. I weighed the pros and cons. And finally, I decided to leave. I don’t regret it, I’m happy to be here [at Al-Ahli]”, Mahrez told L’Equipe.

“I had two years left on my contract; I could’ve stayed. It was me who decided to leave. I felt this opportunity [to sign for Al-Ahli] wouldn’t come again. Maybe it was time to leave, I’d spent five years at City and won everything.”

Best for all parties involved that Riyad Mahrez left

While the treble-winner was largely brilliant during his time at the Etihad Stadium, he had lost his place in the side during the previous campaign after a sharp decline in his performances.

Perhaps Pep Guardiola and Txiki Begiristain still believed that Riyad Mahrez could deliver in a Manchester City shirt beyond last season.

But in all fairness, the 32-year-old had not been at his absolute best since the 2021/2022 campaign, making it the ideal time for all parties to move on in the summer.

Nigerian Music Giant Burna Boy From Low To Top

Burna Boy

Born on July 2, 1991, Damini Ebunoluwa Ogulu, better known by his stage name Burna Boy, is a Nigerian singer, songwriter, and record producer.

He became well-known in 2012 when he released the lead single from his first studio album, L.I.F.E. (2013), “Like to Party.”

Burna Boy signed with Warner Music Group worldwide and Bad Habit/Atlantic Records in the U.S. in 2017. Outside (2018), his third studio album was his first release on a big label.

However, Burna Boy has won the hearts of millions of Nigerians and has so many fans all around the globe as he remains one of the most popular and still trending artists in the world.

His recent 2023/2024 Grammy nominations include; ‘Sitting On Top of the World’ featuring 21 Savage – Best Melodic Rap, ‘I Told Them’ – Best Global Music Album, and ‘Alone’ – Best Global Music Performance.

Here are 10 Things you should know about Burna Boy According to Trendyhiphop

1. Burna Boy’s Mom is His Manager

Burna Boy’s mom, Bose Ogulu, is his manager. She’s typically a powerhouse mom who has been steering the course of Burna’s successful musical career as his manager.

Bose is a businesswoman and educator who has worked as a translator for the Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry in West Africa, she was also a lecturer at the University of Port-Harcourt. The singer’s mom is a vital and supportive part of his music. She has helped him secure deals with record labels and book tours and collaborate with other artists.

2. Burna Is One Of The Richest singers in Africa

Burna Boy has an estimated net worth of about $20 to $25 million as of 2023 from his epic music career, which has been hitting the charts and filling his pockets.

He also gets his cash from touring and charges a considerable amount per performance. He has performed on giant stages like the alluring Grammy Awards and the famed Hollywood Bowl. He made history in 2019 as the first Afrobeat artist to perform at the famous Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival.

He also has Spotify royalty, with over 20 million monthly listeners.

He makes half a million dollars every year from Spotify. He is also an ambassador for brands like Oraimo and Star Lager Bear.

3. He’s The First Nigerian To Headline A Concert At Madison Square Garden

In April 2022, Burna Boy surprisingly made history as the first Nigerian artist to headline Madison Square Garden. The One Night In Space event was also live-streamed. He has also performed at other impressive venues, including L.A.’s Hollywood Bowl and London’s O2, One of the places most African artist rarely performs.

4. His hit single “Last Last” Is The First African song that has over 100 million Spotify plays

Topping his album “Love Damini,” Burna Boy’s hit single “Last Last” is the most streamed African song on Spotify, with worth over 100 million streams, making him the first artist from the African continent to achieve such a feat.

5. He Has A Background In Media

Burna Boy’s ties to his native Nigeria run deep down to his background.

 His grandfather, Benson Idonije, once managed Fela Kuti, so it’s no wonder he’s inspired by the Pan-Africanist musician. Previously, Burna has not only mentioned how influential Fela is but has proved it with his music, sampling him on songs like “Run My Race,” “Boom, Boom, Boom,” and “Ring Ring,” amongst many others.

Burna Boy has always been interested in entertainment, even if he once thought he wouldn’t be at the forefront of the music business/ career.

 Attending the University of Sussex from 2008 to 2009, he studied media technology before moving to Oxford Brookes University for another two years to study media communications and culture. He also took up a yearlong internship in radio.

6. He’s One of the Most Decorated Artist

In 2019, Burna Boy won his first B.E.T. Award for Best International Act, but that’s far from the only time he’s achieved that honor, but so many more.

During his decade-long career, he won a Nigeria Entertainment Award, numerous Headies, a Soul Train Award, and even a Grammy in 2021 for Best Global Music Album for Twice as Tall. He has also been recently nominated for the 2023 Grammies.

7. His Sister Nissi Ogulu Is A Musician Too

Burna Boy’s younger sister and the last born in his family, Nissi Ogulu, is an Afropop singer based in Nigeria and the U.K. While she’s not as famous as her brother, she’s been an ascending artist for years, recently releasing the singles “Higher” and “Overthinking.”

8. He is a Philanthropist

Burna Boy has given his fans a lot of fantastic Naija Music, but he’s also lent his name and resources to many philanthropic efforts. In 2020, he launched the PROJECT PROTECT, “a program designed to offer monetary, health, and legal support both during and beyond the # E.N.D.S.A.R.S. demonstrations in 2020.”

He’s also performed at the Global Citizen Festival, which supports the Demand Equity campaign.

10. His Deeply Into political activism

Burna Boy has been vocal about political issues in Nigeria, and his music has been a powerful tool for social change.

 One of his most notable songs addressing bad governance is Another Story, featuring Ghanaian rapper M.anifest, released in 2019.

The song criticizes the government’s failure to address critical issues in Nigeria, such as corruption and violence. However, he released Dangote in 2019, highlighting Nigeria’s wealth disparity and the need for the government to address poverty.

In 2020, Burna Boy released Monsters You Made, a song that addresses police brutality and corruption in Nigeria. The song featured Coldplay’s Chris Martin addressing protests against Nigeria’s Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).

The protests led to the disbandment of SARS and sparked conversations about police brutality and corruption in the country.

Burna Boy’s political activism extends beyond his music; he has been a vocal advocate for change in Nigeria.

His activism has earned him recognition, including being named by Time Magazine in 2020 as one of the 100 most influential people in the world Heartlandngr.

In 2021, Burna Boy released Question featuring Don Jazzy (MAVINS CEO), which addressed the government’s failure to address the country’s issues, including poverty, corruption, and insecurity. The song asked thought-provoking questions and urged the government to do better.

In conclusion, Burna Boy’s music is not just entertainment but a call to action.

 He uses his platform to speak the truth about power and illuminate issues affecting people in Nigeria and worldwide.

Burna Boy’s political activism and music show that he is not just a talented artist but also a passionate advocate for change.

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