Wow! Nigerians are doing big things around the globe, noble and landmark
achievements. This report is about a great Nigerian, Adebayo Ogunlesi,
who recently acquired the London Gatwick Airport. The Gatwick deal is
reported to worth about £1.455 billion agreement with BAA Airports
Limited. Adebayo Ogunlesi, 56, is the chairman and managing partner,
Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP), an independent investment fund
based in New York City with worldwide stake in infrastructure assets,is
the new owner of the London Gatwick Airport.
Ogunlesi attended the prestigious King’s College, Lagos. He is a member
of the District of Columbia Bar Association. He was a lecturer at
Harvard Law School and the Yale School. Ogunlesi, whose father was the
first Nigerian-born medical professor, studied philosophy, politics and
economics at Oxford and then earned law and business degrees from
Harvard. Ogunlesi has lived in New York for 20 years and is active in
volunteer work. But he also cultivates his ties to Africa. He informally
advises the Nigerian government on privatisation.
And last summer Manute Bol, former NBA center, visited Ogunlesi in his
Park Avenue office, seeking donations for a charitable foundation in
former basketball star Manute Bol’s homeland, Sudan. Ogunlesi walked Bol
around the hallways, introducing him to junior staff. It was just
another day in the Bayosphere.
Prior to his current role, he was executive vice chairman and chief
client officer of Credit Suisse, based in New York. He previously served
as a member of Credit Suisse’s Executive Board and Management Council
and chaired the Chairman’s Board. Previously, he was the Global Head of
Investment Banking at Credit Suisse. Since joining Credit Suisse in
1983, Ogunlesi has advised clients on strategic transactions and
financings in a broad range of industries and has worked on transactions
in North and South America, the Caribbean, Europe, the Middle East,
Africa and Asia.
In the US, he is known as the Nigerian who clerked for late Supreme
Court justice, Thurgood Marshall, who they say was unable to pronounce
his name and quickly dubbed him Obeedoogee. Colleagues and friends call
him Bayo.
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