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Kola Aluko: From Champagne Nights to a Mysterious Disappearance
Kola Aluko was once a visible symbol of Nigeria’s oil wealth on the global stage. An energy and aviation businessman, he moved easily between oil blocks, racetracks, and luxury marinas. For many Nigerians, his name became known not through policy debates but through spectacle.
Aluko’s rise was tied to Atlantic Energy, a company he co-founded in 2011. The firm secured Strategic Alliance Agreements with the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company shortly after Diezani Alison-Madueke became petroleum minister. These deals allowed Atlantic Energy to lift and sell crude under terms that later drew scrutiny from investigators.
The money was evident. Aluko purchased the $80 million Galactica Star superyacht, a vessel later chartered by global celebrities. He acquired a $50.9 million penthouse at One57 in New York and maintained homes in Abuja, Lagos, and California. He also raced Ferraris with Switzerland’s Kessel Racing team. It was a lifestyle built for headlines.
The shift came after Nigeria’s 2015 change in government. With Alison-Madueke out of office, investigations intensified. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the U.S. Department of Justice, and UK authorities alleged that oil contracts were secured through bribery and that proceeds were laundered through luxury assets. Aluko denied wrongdoing.
Asset seizures followed. The Galactica Star was detained in Mexico and later auctioned for about $42 million. His New York penthouse was foreclosed. Courts upheld forfeiture orders on properties, including an Abuja mansion reportedly valued at $18 million. The physical markers of wealth began to disappear.
By 2018, Aluko himself had largely vanished from public view. Reports placed him in Mexico, living quietly while legal proceedings continued in multiple jurisdictions. For several years, he avoided the spotlight that once defined him.
In February 2026, a London court played a 117-minute recording from 2014 involving Aluko and Alison-Madueke, entered as evidence in ongoing money laundering proceedings.
In late 2025, he appeared online promoting a premium tequila brand, Los 7 Ángeles. Even with the London court debacle, Aluko seems to have pivoted from oil to spirits, from superyachts to social media. Whether this signals reinvention or survival remains an open question.






