Audio By Carbonatix
In a gripping interview on JoyNews' Personality Profile with host Lexis Bill, Latvian-born entrepreneur Aldis Ozols laid bare a life story that reads like a Hollywood script.
From clandestine business dealings under Soviet rule to building a €17 million real estate empire, his fortune crumbled in the 2008 financial crash, plunging him into a €7 million debt abyss.
Ozols, 55, recounted his improbable journey during the December 11 broadcast, painting a vivid picture of a man who has faced bankruptcy not once, but ten times since childhood.
"I recently counted all my bankruptcies since childhood—they are 10," he revealed, his voice steady but laced with the weight of hard-won wisdom.
The deepest blow came in 2008, when the global economic meltdown erased his thriving real estate holdings in Latvia.

"I didn’t go back to square one. I went to minus €7 million," he said, describing a descent that left him with no car, no assets, and only a single apartment in Riga's old city for shelter.
Born in Soviet-era Latvia in 1970, Ozols grew up in an environment where private enterprise was not just discouraged but outright dangerous.
"In Soviet Latvia, private business was a risk, and ambition was unwelcome," he explained, noting how his parents tried to mould him into the "ideal Soviet citizen" by steering him away from entrepreneurial dreams.
Defying the odds, he served in the Special Forces, honing a discipline that would later fuel his business pursuits.
By his early thirties, Ozols had amassed a fortune in real estate, becoming a symbol of post-Soviet success.
But the 2008 crisis stripped it all away, compounded by severe health setbacks—including a heart attack that left his body "shrunken" and his spirit tested.
The interview's most poignant moment came when Ozols highlighted his wife's unwavering support amid the ruins.
With everything sold off and creditors circling, she drew a firm line: the family apartment was off-limits.
Instead, she gathered the jewellery he had gifted her over the years, laid it on the table, and urged him forward.
"She said, 'Sell it and start something new. Real estate is gone; start something new. I trust you,'" Ozols recalled, his words underscoring a pivotal act of sacrifice that became the spark for his revival.
That jewellery sale provided the seed capital to pivot away from real estate, marking the beginning of a new chapter.
Arriving in Ghana in 2010 with virtually nothing, Ozols embraced the unfamiliar terrain of West Africa. Drawing on his mechanical aptitude—honed from early tinkering in Latvia—he founded A1 Diesel Limited, a specialist in diesel fuel injection systems, turbochargers, and automotive diagnostics.
Today, the Accra-based company boasts a state-of-the-art repair centre on Spintex Road, serving over 50,000 customers across more than 60 countries.
"Ghana gave me a second chance," Ozols said, crediting the country's vibrant economy and welcoming spirit for his comeback. His firm has grown into a regional powerhouse, employing locals and exporting expertise throughout Africa, with annual revenues now in the millions.
Ozols' story isn't just one of financial recovery; it's a testament to mental fortitude.
He invoked a motivational quote from Russian entrepreneur Oskar Hartmann: "Before you lose $1 billion, don't condemn yourself. You are still good to go."
This mindset, he explained, propelled him through despair, including bouts of depression and physical frailty post-heart attack.
"I lost my fortune, my name, my certainty," reads the book's synopsis, "yet from the ashes of collapse, I found clarity, purpose, and the will to rebuild."
The book, launched just weeks ago at Accra's Marina Mall and available in hard copy for €23 through Ozols' website, serves as a "brutal comeback manual" for anyone facing adversity.
It details his strategies for bouncing back, from mindset shifts to practical business pivots, drawing on lessons from his Soviet upbringing, military service, and multiple failures. Early readers have hailed it as a must-read for 2025, blending raw honesty with actionable advice.
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