…Winners and Runners-up to be Honoured July 9–10, 2025 at The Landmark Hotel and UK House of Lords
LONDON, United Kingdom, May 31, 2025/APO Group/ --
The African Leadership Magazine (ALM) (www.AfricanLeadershipMagazine.co.uk) is pleased to announce the winners of the 2025 African Business Leadership Awards (ABLA), following the conclusion of a rigorous, four-tier, points-based selection process. In keeping with our established tradition, this year’s evaluation combined 65% of the final score from the global online poll with 35% from verified documentation, including evidence of institutional growth, innovation, sustainability, and measurable impact.

Breaking News: African Leadership Magazine Announces Winners for the 2025 African Business Leadership Awards (ABLA)
The African Business Leadership Awards (ABLA) is the continent’s premier platform for recognising exceptional corporate practices, impact-driven leadership, and transformative contributions to Africa’s evolving business and economic ecosystem. The ABLA selection process includes public nominations, editorial board screening, a global public vote, and a final evaluation based on verifiable metrics to ensure that each honoree reflects the highest standards of African excellence, innovation, and measurable impact.
In line with African Leadership Magazine’s unwavering commitment to amplifying Africa’s underreported success stories, often overlooked by mainstream global media, the African Business Leadership Awards (ABLA) celebrate policymakers, industry leaders, and resilient brands that are setting standards in corporate governance, innovation, and sustainable development.
Dr. Ken Giami, Founder & CEO of the African Leadership Organisation, said in an official statement: “On behalf of the Board, we warmly congratulate the winners of ABLA 2025 for their unwavering commitment, groundbreaking achievements, and visionary leadership. Their exemplary contributions are not only transforming Africa’s business landscape but also inspiring a new era of sustainable growth and opportunity across the continent.”
The winners and runners-up will be formally presented with award trophies and other honours during the African Business Leadership Awards (ABLA) Ceremony—the major highlight of The Africa Summit London 2025—scheduled for 9–10 July 2025 at The Landmark Hotel and the UK House of Lords. Additionally, all honourees will be featured in the highly anticipated ABLA 2025 Honourees Edition of African Leadership Magazine, a prized collector’s item unveiled during the event and distributed globally.
Below is the complete list of winners and runners-up in the various categories of the African Business Leadership Awards (ABLA) 2025:
African Business Leader of the Year
- Ntombi Felicia Msiza, CEO, Raubex Group Ltd, South Africa – Winner
- Mohamed Ould Bouamatou, Founder & Chairman, Bouamatou Société Anomyme (BSA), Mauritania – Co-Winner
African Female Business Leader of the Year
- Esther Muchemi, CEO, Samchi Group, Kenya – Winner
- Jesca Mhoja Nkwabi, CEO, KOM Group, Tanzania – Co-Winner
African Regulator of the Year
- Brima M. Baluwa Koroma, Director General, National Petroleum Regulatory Authority, Sierra Leone – Winner
- Leonilde dos Santos, President, Multisectoral Economic Regulatory Authority (ARME), Cape Verde – Co-Winner
Business-Friendly Governor of the Year
- Peter Ndubuisi Mbah, Governor, Enugu State, Nigeria – Winner
- Oscar Mabuyane, Premier, Eastern Cape, South Africa – Co-Winner
Africa CSR & Community Development Impact Award
- Standard Chartered Bank, South Africa – Winner
- Ashanti Goldfields Corporation, Ghana – Co-Winner
African Finance Minister of the Year
- Ahmed Kouchouk, Minister of Finance, Egypt – Winner
- Bihi Iman Egeh, Minister of Finance, Somalia – Winner
- Marial Dongrin Ater, Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, South Sudan – Co-Winner
Trade & Investment Promotion Agency of the Year
- Agency for Private Investment and Export Promotion (AIPEX), Angola – Winner
- Moroccan Agency for Investment and Export Development (AMDIE), Morocco – Co-Winner
Central Bank Governor of the Year
- Mohamed Lemine Dhehby, Governor, Central Bank of Mauritania – Winner
- Johnson Asiama, Governor, Bank of Ghana – Co-Winner
- Rama Krishna Sithanen, Governor, Bank of Mauritius – Co-Winner
Trade & Investment Minister of the Year
- Jumoke Oduwole, Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Nigeria – Winner
- Chipoka Mulenga, Minister of Commerce, Trade and Industry, Zambia – Co-Winner
African CEO of the Year
- Armstrong Takang, CEO, Ministry of Finance Incorporated (MOFI), Nigeria – Winner
- Jeremy Awori, Group CEO, Ecobank Transnational Incorporated (ETI), Togo – Co-Winner
African Brand of the Year
- Ethiopian Airlines – Winner
- Commercial International Bank (CIB), Egypt – Co-Winner
African Company of the Year
- Bidco Africa, Kenya – Winner
- Innoson Vehicle Manufacturing, Nigeria – Co-Winner
Industry Personality of the Year
- Ally Edha Awadh, CEO, Lake Oil Group, Tanzania – Winner
- Jemal Ahmed Abdu, CEO, MIDROC Investment Group PLC, Ethiopia – Co-Winner
Africa Business Integrity Leader Award
- Arab Contractors, Egypt – Winner
- Coris Bank International, Togo – Co-Winner
Young Business Leader of the Year
- Mamotake Matekane, Chief Operations Officer, MGC Matekane Group, Lesotho – Winner
- Martha Namundjebo-Tilahun, Co-founder, United Africa Group, Namibia- Co-Winner
African Tech & Digital Economy Leader of the Year
- Mastercard Africa – Winner
- MTN Group, South Africa – Co-Winner
Lifetime Achievement Award
- Kwabena Kesse, CEO, Kessben Group of Companies, Ghana – Winner
Special Commendation Award for Regulatory Excellence
- Daniel Kiptoo Bargoria, Director General, Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority, Kenya – Winner
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Leadership Magazine.
the hell with you shabab we will defeat you
alla ha u naxariistee
I will advice Somaliland people NOT to put their guards down at anytime. Because you do not know who is the enemy within.
Long live Somaliland and it;s people. Amiin ya Allah!
This is the reality, its clear to us all, instead of concentrating on qabil and divisions there is bigger threat than that, its one with a global agenda and the threat comes from abroad but using inner resources and people. Our youth have been brain washed if those in Somalia were brain washed what makes you think the ones in Somaliland, Djibouti, Kenya or Ethiopia are safe from it? There are already reports hundreds of youth from Kenya's NFD region, Somaliland and dozens from Djibouti are in the Al Shabab terrorism group.
Dozens of young and impressionable men are suddenly disappearing from Canada and the United States without the parents' knowledge or approval. And the parents are helpless and don't know how to find them or who is responsible for their disappearance. Rumour has it that they are brain-washed and recruited by terrorist groups. Last month six Somaliland-Canadians suddenly disappeared from a mosque in Canada and nobody knows where they went and took them.
From now on their name shall become "Shabab Mufsideen" and we shall shed their blood where ever we see them. All Somali tribes where ever they shall put their hands together and fight them until they are exterminated.
I gather these young men who are going to Africa are misled by people who has their own agenda. They are musly very upset how things are going in back home. Before, there was an invission but know no one had any idea why they risking their lives. Why are they doing this and what make themto act this way.
Objective we heard from Shabab is that they want an Islamic country but what they do not know is Islam prohibited suicidal act. There are alternative to get this without harming people. Other people can defend themselves but revenge is not the solution.
From now on their name shall become "Shabab Mufsideen" and we shall shed their blood where ever we see them. All Somali tribes where ever they are shall put their hands together and fight them until they are exterminated.
Al Shabaab are sick animals, many young men from the West of Somali origins and others are joining them because they have fallen behind in these communities and societies many of them are high school drop outs, some former drug addicts.
Some just pissed with the hosting State for many reasons including failing, lack of social life, academic, news constantly attacking Muslims and Islam, and extremists like Al Shabab know this because they been there so they know how to reach out for these kind of youth. The result is young angry men bombarded with twisted ideologies.
Many also lost friends or families to the war before and after Ethiopia's invasion, so they are still angry. This guys are willing to die they do not see right from wrong, they have switched off all their feelings and guilt.
This is very determined enemy of the Somali race, many of Al Shabab leaderships are foreign they often use Somali youth as front men (spokesman, fake commanders etc).
The orders comes from no other than Al Qaeda, who send every few months a new operative and a new objective, they do not use the obvious routes (Arabia to Somalia via the Indian Ocean), many go to Tanzania, Comoros Island or places like Mozambique as businessmen or holidaymakers or visitors then they either fly to Somalia or travel by car through Kenya, Ethiopia-Somali vast border.
The explosives and weapons are supplied to them by Eritrea and Iran via the Ogaden region of Ethiopia or are smuggled through cargo ships carrying goods for "Somali investors from the Gulf".
A lot of the weapons are also smuggled from Somaliland's Burao via the Sool region. These guys are very sophisticated and they have supporters among us.
Sophisticated or not, their actions are alien to the Somali culture, it is Un-Islamic and cowardly. What has the killing of students have to do with anti-American or Anti-west sentiment?..Tell me, where does it say in the Quran to kill anyone in such a callous way? What did those students or any other victim do to deserve this?..