Kenyan Media as Usual Peddling Lies

Two pictures are worth a billion words

Back in 2014
[ATTACH=full]82188[/ATTACH]

Now (Revelations Chapter 2017 Verse 2)

[ATTACH=full]82189[/ATTACH]
Seems like the author an Okuyu was too engrossed by the fake digits being thrown at her. She probably made it all up. The writer Lillian Kiarie should be fired like yesterday for writing a fake story, a lie!

Back in 2014 I wrote to these Media houses telling them to do their research thoroughly. I was brushed aside like a burukenge. We’ve all heard of these Indian frauds. Remember Kamlesh Pattni, Heshan De Silva, the Kamani’s and now Ashish Thakar.

Then the other day, the same burgers went on about how Bidco Group Chairman Vimal Shah is a dollar billionaire. When asked I think by Business Daily quacks, he said the truth but the quack interviewing him ignored his honest answer, he said he doesn’t have a bil which is the truth. There’s nothing to back this up trust me, not even stocks etc .From Steve Mbogo to other quacks.

[ATTACH=full]82191[/ATTACH]

[ATTACH=full]82193[/ATTACH]

I will tell you for free there is no dollar billionaire in Kenya that made honest money via hard work and talent. None Zilch…And that is a fact you can take to the Bank. What does that say about our society? are we all living a lie?

Ashish Thakar, the greatest fraud of the 2010’s. Fooled us and the whole world. First it was Heshan De Silva, then he was busted by the natural order of the universe. Then Steve Mbogo calling it the Grand Pricks. Now Ashish Thakar tells us he’s not even a millionaire in $$ terms. Personally, I don’t even have assets worth $600,000 (KES 60 million) but at least I keep it real, I don’t live a fake life!!

8 Likes

An indian lying ?
Lol That has never happened before.

3 Likes

he may be a sneaky liar, but only a fool would admit to everything he owns during Divorce proceedings… Even Philip Moi says he is broke, and peasants rejoice and proclaim KARMA! :):):smiley:

10 Likes

That there is a smart man. Aliweka assets kwa jina za watu wengine, bibi akileta kichwa anapokea ile ambayo iko kwa jina yake which might be a tenth of his true value. Ameambia ukora ya bibi tawe

8 Likes

True but he already has incriminating evidence in his book. Who’s more foolish now? These courts will have none of it. They’ll use the MI6 and their other audit partners to get those hidden monies. Would have been smarter if he went to divorce court in Uganda or some other country outside EU, never seen many people hack the UK court system trust me. Remember Chicken gate scandal? Seen these cases before in the UK, this isn’t the first. Once the courts establish that one has lied to them, the penalties are usually higher and financially draining.

As for Philip, this is Kenya. This nonsense doesn’t happen in UK. Philip would have been in jail in the UK for refusing the courts order but he has our corrupt courts to thank for his freedom. Plus the courts in UK are not corrupt, he’s not hacking this trust me and will pay every penny he’s worth after they track all his e-mails, phone records, global business transactions etc with the help of the NSA and MI6. My friend nowadays it’s hard to lie to the UK and US courts unless you don’t use any electronic communication device like in the 1700’s then you’re safe

1 Like

:slight_smile:

1 Like

I’m on a commenting sabbatical but was irked by the know it all attitude and dragging personal opinions as facts, since OP is not an elder the rest brush everything off like we are on kindergarten playground . # sips something. Anyways the guy is a fraud and the BS was unmasked years ago. He is in the same caliber as the rest that @Ike Dubaku has mentioned. Most of you all fags up there commenting and creating unfounded theories without prior know how are chieth. The level of information flow here is chocking when everyone has an opinion and the weight is based on meffi and not facts . #Sleepy

3 Likes

Sometimes, it is better to listen to udaku from estate women than read these newspapers. Luckily, in no time, they will be out of business. Especially print editions. Problem is kenyans believe everything spewed by these papers.
At least DN, once in a while carries out some serious investigative stuff. There is this kamau something, an investigative reporter, who knows his job.
The Standard ‘opinion’ pieces= worse than class 6 compositions.

4 Likes

Watu wengine nikawaangalia tu hivi my conman alarm goes off.

[ul]
[li]BUSINESS[/li][/ul]
[SIZE=6]‘Africa’s Youngest Billionaire’ Is Less Successful Than He Seems[/SIZE]
[SIZE=5]The finances of Ashish Thakkar, once called the continent’s youngest billionaire, face scrutiny in a London divorce court[/SIZE]

https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-RX448_0201TH_P_20170201143033.jpg
Ashish Thakkar, founder of Mara Group, has run into problems with some of his ventures. PHOTO: DREW ANGERER/BLOOMBERG NEWS
By
MARGOT PATRICK
Feb. 2, 2017 12:27 p.m. ET
1 COMMENTS
Ashish Thakkar started selling computer parts at age 15 after fleeing Rwanda’s 1994 genocide, eventually becoming an emblem of Africa’s economic promise.

His vision for a more prosperous, tech-savvy Africa enabled his company, Mara Group, to attract partners including former Barclays PLC Chief Executive Bob Diamond,General Electric Co. and Mozido Inc. Several publications referred to Mr. Thakkar, now 35, as “Africa’s youngest billionaire.”

So it came as a surprise to a U.S. investment company checking on a Mara Group e-commerce startup to find that Mr. Thakkar didn’t own a stake in the new business, or in its parent company, which is based in the world’s tallest building in Dubai. Further checking showed that various projects he had publicized hadn’t made it off the ground, and most of 11,000 people he has said the company employs in 25 African countries don’t work directly for Mara.

On Monday, a London court is set to study Mara Group’s ownership as part of Mr. Thakkar’s divorce from his wife of five years. Mr. Thakkar told the divorce court last year he doesn’t own Mara Group and his personal assets are worth less than $600,000.

A Wall Street Journal examination of corporate filings and court records, and interviews with two dozen people including investors, show Mara Group has investments and assets worth about $30 million, the biggest chunk being a minority stake in a technology-services company. They are held through a network of companies registered in the British Virgin Islands. Until 2012, the company, which doesn’t file financial reports, was owned by a “bearer share” Panama foundation, owned by whoever held the stock certificate.

https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/P1-BZ975_THAKKE_16U_20170201152105.jpg

Mr. Thakkar said in an interview that Mara Group has always been owned by his mother and sister, and that he isn’t motivated by money. “Being the face of something doesn’t make you the owner of it,” he said. He never claimed to be a billionaire, he said. His other family members declined to comment.

Not long ago, a gold rush of foreign investment into the continent gave rise to the catch phrase “Africa Rising.” Now, investors’ enthusiasm has dimmed amid a commodities slump, and growth projections for sub-Saharan Africa are the lowest in two decades.

Mr. Thakkar and Mara Group, similarly, have hit a rough patch. Atlas Mara Ltd., the African banking group Mr. Thakkar co-founded with Mr. Diamond, lost 78% of its stock-market value in three years. A South African real-estate fund is removing “Mara” from its name after recently cutting ties with Mr. Thakkar. An Abu Dhabi sheik took legal action last year to cash out of a troubled, Mara-run fund. Shopping malls and office buildings Mr. Thakkar had hoped to develop have been mothballed, and the e-commerce venture struggled to raise capital.

https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-RX451_0201TH_P_20170201143337.jpg
Former Barclays CEO Bob Diamond, right, co-founded African banking group Atlas Mara with Mr. Thakkar. PHOTO: WALDO SWIEGERS/BLOOMBERG NEWS
“We’ve still got a lot to do, and we’ve still got a lot to prove,” Mr. Thakkar said. The company, he said, “never tried to make it out that it’s bigger than it is.”

Mara Group group employs about two dozen people, including family members. The 11,000 employees Mr. Thakkar often mentions, he said, refer mainly to those working at banks owned by Atlas Mara, of which he owns around 0.3%, and ISON Group, the technology-services company in which Mara holds a 22% stake.

Mr. Thakkar was born in Leicester, England, after his parents left Uganda during dictator Idi Amin’s purge of ethnic Indians. They moved to Rwanda when Mr. Thakkar was 12.

On his first visit to Rwanda’s capital, Kigali, Mr. Thakkar watched out his window a massacre unfolding that would take 800,000 lives over 100 days, he recalled in his 2015 book, “The Lion Awakes: Adventures in Africa’s Economic Miracle.”

Mr. Thakkar left school at 15. He started flying to Dubai to buy computer parts, then sell them across Africa. It was the start of Mara Group, which grew to include a cardboard-manufacturing plant and a residential development in Kampala. At 18, he changed his name to Ashish, from Prateen, on the advice of the Hindu guru his family follows.

Around the turn of this decade, Mr. Thakkar hatched a proposition for investors coming to Africa: Mara could help cut through red tape, drawing on his relationships with governments. Executives at companies who worked with Mara say Mr. Thakkar helped secure local licenses and approvals and introduced them to government officials in countries such as Zimbabwe and Uganda.

“We were coming to Africa for the first time. We felt we would need somebody to hold our hand and take us through the complex nuances of a new continent,” said Ramesh Awtaney, the founder of ISON Group, a Kenya-based technology company that set up in Africa in 2010.

Mr. Thakkar became an unpaid adviser to Uganda’s president, Yoweri Museveni, and to Rwandan President Paul Kagame.

A member of Abu Dhabi’s ruling family, Sheikh Nahayan bin Mubarak al Nahayan, put $19 million into a fund for Mara’s projects in technology and agriculture, according to a legal filing by one of the sheik’s companies. The fund, run by Mr. Thakkar and his brother-in-law, Prashant Manek, bought part of Mara’s stake in the ISON venture and Ugandan farmland.

No other investors signed on, and the fund languished when Mr. Thakkar separated from Mr. Manek’s sister in 2013. The two men stopped speaking as the families tussled over the divorce, according to people familiar with the fund.

The sheik sued in the Cayman Islands to try to liquidate the fund, claiming Mr. Thakkar and Mr. Manek shirked their duties by failing to find other investors, running up unnecessary costs and letting the family dispute affect the company.

Mr. Thakkar said he has stepped down from the fund’s board. “It’s relationships related to my divorce, which were not managed well, and the entity was not managed well,” he said.

A lawyer for Mr. Manek declined to comment.

By then, Mr. Thakkar had hooked up with Mr. Diamond, who left Barclays in 2012. Mr. Diamond had set up a private-equity firm, Atlas Merchant Capital LLC, and was putting together a plan to buy African banks. The two men founded Atlas Mara six months after meeting at a conference. In 2013 and 2014, the company raised $625 million on the London Stock Exchange to buy banks in countries including Botswana and Nigeria.

Mr. Diamond said in an emailed statement that Mr. Thakkar’s relationships across Africa were crucial to Atlas Mara acquiring eight banks in seven countries.

Both men are on Atlas Mara’s board and own shares. Mr. Thakkar holds a stake now worth about $466,000.

The tie-up with Mr. Diamond elevated Mr. Thakkar’s profile with big institutional investors, including two of Atlas Mara’s biggest shareholders, U.S. mutual-fund company Wellington Management Co. and privately held investment firm Guggenheim Partners.

In 2014, Wellington invested $25 million in a now-defunct mobile-money venture Mara Group worked on with U.S. technology company Mozido Inc., people familiar with the matter said. Mr. Thakkar said Mara and Mozido “briefly formed a joint venture together but decided to go our separate ways.” Wellington and Mozido declined to comment.

Guggenheim Partners, which previously seeded Mr. Diamond’s private-equity fund with $200 million, also considered investments with Mara Group.

In November 2014, Messrs. Thakkar and Diamond took Guggenheim Chief Investment Officer Scott Minerd around Uganda and Rwanda by private jet and helicopter. In Kampala, they saw a 14-acre site Mr. Thakkar had been trying to develop for years, then lunched with Uganda’s prime minister.

A Guggenheim spokesman said its officials frequently travel to look at potential and existing investments, and it covers their trip costs.

Last year, a property fund listed on the Johannesburg stock exchange bought a stake in a Kenyan mall from a consortium of investors including Mara Group and hired Mara to find more investments. The fund changed its name to Mara Delta Property Holdings Ltd. and Mr. Thakkar joined the board.

Mr. Thakkar said in November Mara Delta might buy more Mara-linked developments. Weeks later, he suddenly resigned from Mara Delta’s board.

Mara Delta said its contract with Mara Group was dissolved by mutual agreement and it plans to remove Mara from its name. Mr. Thakkar declined to comment.

In 2015, Mr. Thakkar visited investors in the U.S. to try to raise $100 million for the e-commerce business. Christian Unger, a technology executive at Swiss private-equity firm Partners Group AG, was named chief executive. When investors didn’t commit, Mr. Unger decided to remain at Partners Group, a person familiar with the matter said.

“We both decided that he wanted to move on,” Mr. Thakkar said. Mr. Unger declined to comment.

Back in Dubai, Mr. Thakkar is working on a scaled-down version of the e-commerce startup, delivering parcels.

Write to Margot Patrick at [email protected]

SHOW COMMENTS(1)

[SIZE=3]POPULAR ON WSJ[/SIZE]
[SIZE=5]Most Popular Videos[/SIZE]
[ul]
[li][URL=‘http://www.wsj.com/video/inside-the-highest-priced-home-in-the-us/FC9D5FBD-77F7-4A7E-A6D2-DA49E72465F9.html?mod=trending_now_video_1’][/li]https://m.wsj.net/video/20170207/020717mansion/020717mansion_167x94.jpg[/URL]
[SIZE=3]Inside the Highest-Priced Home in the U.S.[/SIZE]
[li][URL=‘http://www.wsj.com/video/court-hearing-executive-order-on-immigration/52172C7D-0E40-4D5E-9CAA-9626D100D495.html?mod=trending_now_video_2’][/li]https://m.wsj.net/video/18000101/52172c7d0e404d5e9caa9626d100d495/52172c7d0e404d5e9caa9626d100d495_167x94.jpg[/URL]
[SIZE=3]Court Hearing: Executive Order on Immigration[/SIZE]
[li][URL=‘http://www.wsj.com/video/superyacht-ailing-yacht-a-leaves-germany/A08E69F6-07BB-42A2-819A-F295DB67A3B8.html?mod=trending_now_video_3’][/li]https://m.wsj.net/video/20170207/020717megayachtb/020717megayachtb_167x94.jpg[/URL]
[SIZE=3]Superyacht ‘Sailing Yacht A’ Leaves Germany[/SIZE]
[li][URL=‘http://www.wsj.com/video/obama-and-richard-branson-in-kitesurfing-challenge/E8554B71-60D8-4E7B-9889-F74FB8DFC48A.html?mod=trending_now_video_4’][/li]https://m.wsj.net/video/20170207/020717obamasurfing/020717obamasurfing_167x94.jpg[/URL]
[SIZE=3]Obama and Richard Branson in Kitesurfing Challenge[/SIZE]
[li][URL=‘http://www.wsj.com/video/super-bowl-ad-snickers/FA37C2AC-379D-45A6-BCF4-AB316C4B7892.html?mod=trending_now_video_5’][/li]https://m.wsj.net/video/20170206/020617snickers/020617snickers_167x94.jpg[/URL]
[SIZE=3]Super Bowl Ad: Snickers[/SIZE]
[/ul]
[SIZE=5]Most Popular Articles[/SIZE]
[ul]
[li]https://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-RZ289_2WkV5_C_20170206161659.jpg[/li][SIZE=3]Opinion: Who’s ‘Normalizing’ Donald Trump Now?[/SIZE]
[li]https://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-RZ655_DEVOS0_C_20170207130129.jpg[/li][SIZE=3]DeVos Approved as Education Secretary With Pence’s Tiebreaking Vote[/SIZE]
[li]https://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-RZ362_HEALTH_C_20170206180359.jpg[/li][SIZE=3]In GOP, Divide Grows Over Pace of Obamacare Repeal[/SIZE]
[li]https://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-RZ361_glovie_C_20170206180350.jpg[/li][SIZE=3]Opinion: The Thomas Hobbes Presidency[/SIZE]
[li]https://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-RY800_DEVOS0_C_20170205141948.jpg[/li][SIZE=3]Opposition Mounts for Education Nominee Betsy DeVos[/SIZE]
[/ul]

[ul][li]Wall Street Journal[/ul][/li]Edition:

Text Size:
Subscribe NowSign In

[ul][li]WSJ Membership Benefits[/ul][/li][ul][li]Download WSJ Apps[/ul][/li][ul][li]Customer Center[/ul][/li][ul][li]Legal Policies[/ul][/li][ul][li]Facebook[/ul][/li][ul][li]Twitter[/ul][/li][ul][li]Google+[/ul][/li][ul][li]YouTube[/ul][/li][ul][li]Podcasts[/ul][/li][ul][li]Snapchat[/ul][/li][ul][li]GooglePlay[/ul][/li][ul][li]AppStore[/ul][/li][ul][li]Windows10[/ul][/li][ul][*]Copyright ©2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.[/ul]

Inatuhusu nini?

Anyway, Philip Moi, or whoever, alisema he owns nothing, yet the whole country knows he owns a lot…even from his family…

Hata mimi nikifika hapo and have to divorce, I will devalue my assets big time

hehehehe Philip Moi is nowhere close to broke. Believe me. He just doesn’t want to pay Pluda.
meanwhile, if you want to make a lot of money, be prepared to get your hands dirty.