Just to speak at an event in Lagos, southwest Nigeria, a Nigerian
company paid the former American President, Bill Clinton, $700,000 (over
N100 million), the New York Times disclosed on Thursday.
The New York Times did not disclose the name of the company which handed Clinton the huge sum of money.
Clinton,
since he left office, has visited Nigeria many times, the last two
being a guest speaker at the launch of Eko Atlantic City and Thisday
Awards.
America’s influential newspaper did not also disclose
when the money was paid but said Bill Clinton made $17 million (N2.5
billion) from speeches last year alone.
The disclosure was made
as the newspaper revealed also that Hillary Clinton will be paid
$200,000 to offer pithy reflections and Mitch Albom-style lessons from
her time as the nation’s top diplomat.
“The $200,000 she commands
appears to be comparable to what Bill Clinton receives for speeches
delivered in this country, though Mr. Clinton — who earned $17 million
from speeches last year — has collected much more outside the United
States, including the $700,000 he was paid when he spoke to a company in
Lagos, Nigeria,” The New York Times said.
Some of the
businessmen who had invited Bill Clinton to Nigeria include Nduka
Obaigbena, publisher of ThisDay newspaper whose workers protested in May
2013 for being owed months of unpaid salaries.
As for Hillary
Clinton, the newspaper said next month, Mrs. Clinton will speak at a
meeting of the Global Business Travel Association in San Diego (a
convention her husband addressed for $250,000 last June), and in the
fall she will deliver speeches at the conference of the American Society
of Travel Agents in Miami.
Nigeria is Africa’s second richest
country, but the National Bureau of Statistics, NBS, said last year that
100 million out about 160 million Nigerians live in abject poverty.

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