News

Tanzanian billionaire Dewji explains why he asked kidnappers to ‘shoot him’

Last updated on September 11th, 2021 at 03:18 pm

Tanzanian billionaire Mohammed Dewji, who was kidnapped and held for 10 days in October last year, says he was ready to die, having been disoriented by his captivity.
43-year-old Dewji, who is widely considered to be Africa’s youngest billionaire, told the BBC he asked his kidnappers to shoot him. He was speaking to mainstream media for the first time since he was abducted outside a hotel gym in the country’s main city, Dar es Salaam.
Why I asked kidnapper to shoot me
Dewji said he was disoriented and blindfolded at the time he asked the kidnappers to end his life.

“ You get disoriented, you’re tired, because it’s a form of torture. ”
“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 eye sight,” Dewji narrated.
“[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.”

Ten days after his abduction, Dewji was released, and he says no ransom was paid.

Neither the authorities in Tanzania nor Dewji have established a clear motive for his abduction. The billionaire says he was abandoned in a field near the same hostel where he had been kidnapped.

“I still don’t know why it happened,” he said. “Obviously the intention looked like it was money that they wanted. In the end they left me without the money.”

A Tanzanian taxi driver, Mousa Twaleb is the only suspect who is being held in connection with the case.
Lessons from the ordeal
Dewji says he has made a few lifestyle changes following this traumatic experience, including replacing the lights in his house with brighter bulbs and abandoning his habit of jogging alone on the beach.
With wealth estimated at $1.5bn (£980m), Dewji says the experience has also intensified his appetite to ‘give back’.
He says he will invest up to $400m in agriculture in Tanzania over the next two years, ‘not for profit but to make an impact’.
His company, MeTL has interests in textile manufacturing, flour milling, beverages and edible oils in at least six African countries, and Dewji is credited with turning the company from a wholesale and retail enterprise into a multi-billion dollar pan-African conglomerate.

Albert Echetah

Recent Posts

Africa and GCC Trade Doubles to $121 Billion

Trade between African and GCC countries stands at $ 121 billion in 2023, double of what it was in 2016.…

December 22, 2024

Families in Mayotte rebuilding their homes complain of lack of help

Family members struggling after one week after  of Cyclone Chido ripped through the French island territory of Mayotte expressed helplessness…

December 21, 2024

Ethiopian PM Inaugurates UAE-Funded Orphanage in Oromia

The United Arab Emirates has launched its orphanage project in Ethiopia's Oromia region on the orders of President Sheikh Mohamed…

December 21, 2024

A Rising Femicide Threat, Kenya’s Call to End Gender Based Violence

In just four months, 100 women have been killed, the majority by males they knew including spouses. Prime Cabinet Secretary…

December 20, 2024

Actor C Confion has passed away

The Ghanaian entertainment industry is in deep mourning following the sudden death of Bright Owusu, better known as C Confion.…

December 20, 2024

South Africa: 512 Accident Deaths and 941 Arrested for Drunk Driving Just on December Month

Since the beginning of December more than five hundred people have lost their lives on the nation's highways. Barbara Creecy,…

December 19, 2024

This website uses cookies.