Michael Ibru, husband of Cecilia Ibru, former managing director of Oceanic Bank, has died.
Disclosing this in a statement, the family said he died in a US hospital in the early hours of Tuesday.
His death comes about five weeks after Felix, his brother, was buried.
The
successful businessman also tried his hands in politics, contesting the
1983 governorship election of the old Bendel state. However, he lost to
Samuel Ogbemudia.
James Ibori, former governor of Delta state,
described Ibru’s death as “a great shook, not because the man who was
born in 1930 and so was 86 died young, but because he was one of the few
that actually defined the veritable Nigerian entrepreneurial spirit”.
He said the deceased was a trail-blazer who streaked through Nigeria like a meteor, lighting up the way for others to follow.
“In
1956, Ibru was just a 26-year-old young man, yet he had the vision and
the boldness to leave the U.A.C, and started a partnership with an
expatriate, Jimmy Large, which he called Laibru,” Ibroi said via a
statement signed by Tony Eluemunor, his media assistant.
Laibru
successfully engaged in general trading, yet, a year later, Michael Ibru
discovered some loopholes he could plug in the frozen fish market.
“Although
this business was cornered by expatriate firms, Ibru plunged into it,
establishing an importing company, rented and built cold storage
facilities across the country, and by the mid-1960s fish business had
become the traditional money maker for the Ibru organization.
“From,
there, Ibru ventured into other profitable interests. He had such a
Midas touch that he founded booming businesses in the fields of
transportation, construction, etc.”
He also said: “The greatest
lesson that Michael Ibru has left for Nigerians is that fact that he saw
it as a point of duty to help his siblings develop their business
empires, yet, they remained as one close knit family.
“The second
lesson is that a business should not necessarily be a one-man concern.
Thus, Ibru went into several partnerships with different people.
“The
result is that today, the Ibru Organisation is an important segment of
the Nigerian economy. In fact, it is an empire that runs from fishing to
air transportation, Guardian newspapers, the hospitality business. In
fact, the Ibru family-owned houses must have been one of the first
private Real Estate firms in Nigeria.”
Similarly, Monday Igbuya,
speaker of the Delta state house of assembly, condoled with the Ibru
family, describing the deceased as a modest and strong businessman.
“Olorogun
Micheal Ibru was a shrewd businessman with a good heart,” Igbuya said
in a statement issued on his behalf by Henry Ebireri, his spokesman.
“Olorogun
Michael Ibru as an international businessman, philanthropist, educator,
a lover of children, grassroots organizer and community leader gained
the respect, trust and love of the entire country and he will be greatly
missed.”


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