Amadou Samba's Blog
Monday, May 16, 2011
Amadou Samba and Elton Oil: Educating the Public on Road Safety Issues and Rewarding Loyal Patrons with Safer Driving Conditions
Elton Oil Company is essentially a retail, marketing, and distribution company operating in Gambia and Senegal, with a network of stations selling gasoline, diesel, gas, oil, lubricant products from Castrol, as well as tires from Bridgestone. It is known for operating the Gambia’s first automatic car wash. In collaboration with West Coast Radio, the company sponsored a program called “Driver-Bi,” intended to educate the public on road safety issues.
Amadou Samba, through Elton Oil, also aims to reward loyal patrons through the Japaleh Kafoo program, in collaboration with the International Insurance Company (IIC). Drivers who purchase the minimum required amount of oil (amount in liters may vary based on vehicle type) or other Elton Oil products and services receive personal accident insurance. Drivers will receive financial aid to cover the cost of hospitalization as a result of permanent disability due to a vehicular accident – the types of which are listed in the policy’s terms and conditions. The driver’s family may also receive monetary compensation should the driver meet an untimely death caused by a vehicular accident.
Elton Oil does not require extra charges for drivers to avail of these services. This program not only ensures brand loyalty among its patrons, it also guarantees that continued patronage of the company’s products and services get converted into benefits that drivers can enjoy.
More information on Amadou Samba and Elton Oil may be found at this website.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Amadou Samba Supports the Gambia Growth and Competitiveness Project
Gambian entrepreneur Amadou Samba extends his congratulations to the Gambian President, His Excellency Professor Alhaji Dr. Yahya Jammeh and the Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs for the successful launch of the US$12 million Gambia Growth and Competitiveness Project (GGCP) on March 22, 2011. A giant step towards creating more employment for the people of Gambia, the project is funded by the World Bank, and has been designed to respond and mitigate the impact on the three big F’s – fuel, food, and financial crisis. With an implementation period spanning five years, the GGCP realizes the government’s growth and job creation agenda, particularly in agribusiness and tourism, two sectors that Amadou Samba and industry analysts agree need intensive development.
In his launching address, President Jammeh discussed the project’s strategy for agricultural development, which revolves around an out-grower scheme.
“Phase One, which spans Year One to Four, is to test and develop the establishment of a commercial mango farming system in partnership with one or more private investors in order to produce a consistent volume and quality of new and existing mango varieties targeted for the fresh fruits exports market; as well as supporting private investments in processing secondary and tertiary quality produce for domestic and export markets,” he said. “Phase Two, which will run from Year Four to Five, should competently strengthen the capacity of small holder farmers and link them to international market supply chain, particularly for exporting premium grade mangoes.”
Said the president, Phase Two of the project includes the establishment of facilities for the pulping, freezing, and drying of fruit and produce, industry processes that will help shape Gambia into a top manufacturer of high-quality juices, concentrates, and other fruit products for both local and international markets.
More information on Amadou Samba can be found at gambia.gtbank.com/amadou_samba.
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Amadou Samba: Gambia's Groundnut Industry Lives
Gambia’s groundnut industry plummeted due to several factors. Once selling the country’s biggest cash crop, the sector died of gross mismanagement. Amadou Samba saw Gambia’s groundnut estate fall to pieces at the turn of the millennium, from erratic rainfall, seed shortages, and a faulty marketing system allowing crops to be bought on credit and groundnut farmers to go for months unpaid.
By 2007, bank loans for buying seeds, fertilizers, and tools for growing groundnuts had gotten harder to grant. Farmers fled their posts by the hundreds. “Many of the farmers in the region have to pull their children from school while they wait to be paid,” shares Lamin Sanno, a former groundnut farmer from Bantungding village.
During the government’s intervention in 2008, the first order of business was abolishing the practice of credit-buying as government-built Gambia Groundnut Corporation set out to sell groundnuts strictly for cash.
Next, as local demand for the product shrank and end-season surplus grew, producers were moving points-of-sale across the border. Lines of export for the crop were rebuilt, strengthened, and promoted.
Today, with a $14 million financing grant from Saudi Arabia’s International Islamic Trade Finance Corporation in the procurement of groundnuts, Gambia’s erstwhile industrial failure is slowly getting back its crunch.
More information on Amadou Samba can be seen at gambia.gtbank.com/amadou_samba.
Friday, February 11, 2011
The Inspiring Story of Amadou Samba of Gambia
To prepare for his journey to law school, he sought employment at the magistrates’ court division of the Gambian judicial department as a clerk. Impressed by his talent, he was awarded a government scholarship to study law at the University of Nigeria at Enugu, where he graduated with honors. Amadou Samba did Gambia proud when he became one of the legal counsels of the Gambian delegation to the UN Law of the Sea Conference in Jamaica. This is one of his biggest achievements as a lawyer. After completing his post-graduate studies in International Law, he decided to put up his private legal practice.
Samba attracted a lot of clients, representing a number of newly-set up companies. Having been exposed to the business world, he decided to venture into entrepreneurship, particularly in construction. His contributions to the development of the Gambian construction industry earned him awards such as the Gambia Man of the Year award, given in 1992, and the Millennium Medal in 2002 awarded by none other than President Yahya Jammeh of the Republic of Gambia.
Amadou Samba continues to be an inspiration to his fellow men, and his story is proof positive that with talent and hard work, anything can be possible. More information on him may be found at gambia.gtbank.com/amadou_samba.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Amadou Samba: Putting The Gambia on the Global Industrial Map
Having only gained independence in 1965, however, the nation’s largely undeveloped economy was not the least bit complemented by its dry, vagarious climate. A continually lackluster production of groundnuts and other flagship crops resulted in a steady decline in its gross domestic product and foreign exchange earnings, causing The Gambia to fade into the black waters of economic obscurity.
This whirlpool decline in exports, investments, and consumption as an offshoot of meager economic activity saw a sea of change when Amadou Samba entered the world of Gambian commerce. Spending the first ten years of his career in civil service as a state counsel, Samba gained a formidable reputation as a lawyer, attracting clients left and right with his solid chamber work and representation when he decided to practice privately in 1985.
Testing the waters of industry, he took the role of trust managing director for construction magnate ALFRON (Gambia) Ltd. in 1986. He then established Moskam Fisheries, raising production to such heights that made fish and fish produce the country’s second biggest export.
Going against the tides, Samba founded a series of commercial firsts for The Gambia – GACEN, the nation’s first cement manufacturer, Gamwater, the country’s premiere water bottling company, Gamcorrugate, the nation’s pilot manufacturer for corrugated materials and boards, and Gampetroleum, the nation’s first oil storage, retailer, and distributor.
A beacon of industrial innovation, operational virtue, and social development, he leads The Gambia’s Social Security and Housing Finance Corporation as chairman of the board of directors.
More on how Amadou Samba sailed The Gambia through the high seas of industrialization is available at gambia.gtbank.com/amadou_samba.php.