For many wealth means a generational supply of opportunities and money to be able to do whatever they want. However, for others, wealth is definitive of their journey, one filled with trials, tribulations, and at the end, success.In Africa’s expanding billionaire class, most names belong to the country’s natives, Nigeria, South Africa or Egypt. Among them stands tall, a name whose legacy has withstood exile and expulsion. Sudhir Ruparelia, a Uganda-born Indian embodies both, the pain and promise of the African luxury.
Who is Sudhir Ruparelia?
Dr Sudhir Ruparelia is the founder and chairman of the Ruparelia Group.
Dr Sudhir Ruparelia is the founder and chairman of the Ruparelia Group. He is among East Africa’s most successful entrepreneurs and is widely regarded as Uganda’s richest man.His journey is a classic tale of migration, resilience and reinvention, one that began from the shores of Gujarat and crossed the Indian Ocean to reach East Africa. He survived the violent upheavals of dictatorship and exile and triumphed over it all to become what he is. In 1897, his great-grandfather left Porbandar, Gujarat aboard a dhow bound for Mombasa, Kenya. “It was said there was so much land in Africa that even a fence post would take root,” Sudhir later recalled in an interview.By 1903, the family had moved to inland Uganda, then a British protectorate. His grandfather was born there in 1908, his father in 1932 and he in 1956, making the Ruparelias one of the earliest Indian families to establish permanent roots in East Africa. They opened a small trading store in Jinja and later a petrol station in Queen Elizabeth National Park.However, in the 1970s, during the regime of Idi Amin, his family were among the 50,000 Asians who were expelled from Uganda within 90 days, leaving behind their businesses, homes and futures.He was just 16, when his family was forced to move to the United Kingdom as refugees, while he willingly stayed behind. They had to rebuild everything from scratch.“It was an awful moment for the Asian community,” Sudhir recalls. “You couldn’t predict what would happen to you the next day. But I convinced my parents to leave me behind on the promise that I would join them later.”Later, he fled to London and took up odd jobs to make money including working in factories, handling molten wax on test tubes and sleeping in cramped refugee housing. “It was the most sickening job in the entire factory,” he once said. “No protection, unbearable heat, I lasted five months.”
Return to Uganda
Today his empire spans across real estate, education, hospitality, insurance and agriculture.
In the mid-1980s, as Uganda’s economy slumped, President Yoweri Museveni seized power and encouraged the exiles to return. Thus, in 1985, Ruparelia returned to his home base with savings of about $25,000.He began with trading commodities like beer, salt and sugar imported from neighbouring countries such as Kenya. This small trading venture gradually formed the foundation of his business empire that today, spans across real estate, education, hospitality, insurance and agriculture.He quickly expanded into financial services, setting up a foreign exchange business before launching Crane Forex Bureau in 1995, which rose to become one of Uganda’s largest lenders. Within a decade, it grew into the country’s second-largest private bank, with more than 38 branches worldwide.
A life full of struggle
Sudhir Ruparelia’s journey reflects the economic pulse of Uganda and the determined beats of a relentless man
Like most successful business empires of the day, Ruparelia’s journey wasn’t without its own set of ups and downs. In 2015, Forbes valued his wealth at $800 million, but market shocks and tighter financial regulations wiped out nearly $250 million from his fortune.In 2016, Uganda’s central bank overtook Crane Bank due to regulatory issues, marking one of the biggest setbacks in his career. It was his diversified investments, particularly in real estate and hospitality, that helped him stay afloat and maintain his position at the top.By November 2023, he had recuperated his net worth to $1.2 billion, restoring his place among Africa’s wealthiest billionaires. The Speke Group of hotels, Kabira Country Club, Victoria University, Kampala Parents School, Sanyu FM, and Premier Roses, Uganda’s largest flower exporter, all carry his signature. It is this vast portfolio that earned him the nickname “The Landlord of Kampala.”On May 3, 2025, tragedy struck again. Ruparelia’s only son and heir, Rajiv Ruparelia died in a car accident at the age of 35, a devastating loss for a parent. As a grieving father, he honoured his son’s memory by establishing a scholarship initiative in his memory. During Victoria University’s 9th Graduation Ceremony, he and his wife Jyotsna announced the establishment of the Rajiv Ruparelia Bursary, a scholarship initiative offering 100 fully funded postgraduate awards to outstanding students. “Rajiv touched so many lives through his generosity and vision,” Sudhir said at the Ceremony. “This is our way of keeping his legacy alive.”Today, in the heart of Kampala, Sudhir Ruparelia’s journey reflects the economic pulse of Uganda and the determined beats of a relentless man.