Aliko Dangote (52), the 463th richest man on the planet. Dangote’s career spans over various industries including trading in sugar, flour milling, salt processing, cement manufacturing, real estate and oil and gas. Net worth: $2.1 billion. Country: Nigeria.
Johann Rupert (59) & family, the 421st richest person in the world. Head of his family business, Swiss luxury group Richemont, Rupert also owns Remgro, a local investment holding company. Net worth $2.3 billion. Country: South Africa.
Africa’s Billionaires (No. 1) * Name: Mohammed Al Amoudi * Net Worth: 10 Billion * Origin: Ethiopia
Africa’s Billionaires (No. 10) Name: Mohammed Ibrahim Net Worth: 2.1 Billion Origin: Sudan
Naguib Sawiris (55), the 374th richest man in the world, heads up Orascom Telecom, one of largest mobile providers in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia. Eldest son of Onsi Sawiris (#3) and brother of Samih Sawiris (#8). Net worth: $2.5 billion. Country: Egypt.
Nassef Sawiris (48), 127th wealthiest man in the world; took over leadership of Orascom’s construction and fertiliser division in 1998. Youngest son of the Sawiris (#3). Net worth: $5.9 billion. Country: Egypt.
Nicky Oppenheimer & family (64), the 154th richest person in the world, heads of De Beers Diamond mines, the world’s largest diamond producer. Net worth: $5.0 billion. Country: South Africa. Africa’s Billionaires (No. 3)
Onsi Sawiris (80), the 307th richest man in the world and self-made billionaire is the founder of Egypt’s business empire, Orascom Construction Industries. Net worth: $3.1 billion. Country: Egypt.
Deborah Wright can't remember the exact moment, but her eyes sparkle when asked about her ambition: "I have always wanted to fly planes."
For Jon Huntsman -- son of Jon Huntsman Jr., the U.S. ambassador to China and former Utah Republican governor -- the spark came during family vacations to Coronado along the California coast near San Diego. "Watching the Navy SEALs train all day and just wondering, 'What drives those guys out there?' You know? And it's just, serving your country."
To reach their goal, they spend what amounts to their freshman year of college in military uniforms, mixing a stringent class schedule with mandatory physical drills and other military-style training. And they do this far away from home and family, in a remote high desert town: Roswell, New Mexico, better known to most Americans for its UFO museum than as the home of the New Mexico Military Institute.
The sprawling campus has a mix of high school and college students, all required to wear uniforms and accept military-style discipline. In exchange, they get what the school bills as a top-notch education and a proven track record of graduates who move on to leadership roles in the military and civilian sectors.
"My entire faculty -- everyone has a master's degree, and more than half have a doctorate degree," says Maj. Gen. Jerry W. Grizzle, the NMMI superintendent. "And they're teaching ninth-graders as well as teaching freshmen and sophomores in college. And so the quality and value of that education is what people seek, and they accept the fact that we do that in a military platform."
Just shy of 20 percent are here as a steppingstone to active-duty military service: Some are commissioned into the Army from the institute's ROTC program; others, like Wright and Huntsman, are here for a yearlong curriculum designed to help them get into the country's military academies.
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