Editorial

Prof Claude Ake: Well Done, RSG

Published

on

About 15 years ago, precisely on November 7, 1996, the cold hands of death snatched away Professor Claude Ake from this earth.

He died along with 141 others in the ill-fated ADC plane crash in Ejigbo, Lagos State, on that fateful day.

Though Professor Ake is dead, but like the icons and great works of stars and artistes, his message, teachings and thoughts, being indelible are ever more relevant today than they were at the time of his death. And these remain afloat in the waters of our fertile minds and those of many generations yet unborn.

The development of Africa as a whole and Nigeria in particular was one passion that consumed his adult life. He held to this passion through writings, public lectures, and policy discourses and debates, through which he provided the panacea to the many woes that, have befallen the African continent.

Yet, despite his numerous contributions to the intellectual development of students and scholars who passed through him in America, Europe and Africa, no government had deemed it fit to immortalize this great son of Rivers State, whose intellectual prowess had no boundaries.

It is for this reason that we view the decision by the Rivers State Government under the leadership of Rt. Hon. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi to immortalize the late Professor Claude Ake as a step in the right direction.

The administration has instituted an annual memorial lecture in honour of late Professor Claude Ake, the first of which took place about a fortnight ago in Port Harcourt, with the former Botswana President, Festus Mogae, delivering a lecture titled, “Doom to Boom: Re-engineering The Political Economy Of Rivers State For Citizens Prosperity; Lessons From Botswana”.

Speaking at the occasion, Governor Chibuike Amaechi noted that Professor Ake was an intellectual colossus that can only be immortalized by deepening democracy in Africa as a whole and Nigeria in particular.

He stated that the next edition of the annual lecture would hold outside Rivers State, to reflect the international pedigree of late Professor Ake.

Governor Amaechi also assured that the Centre for Advanced Social Sciences (CASS), which was the creation of late Professor Ake through which he maintained the intellectual tempo for positive national political and economic growth, would receive the state government’s attention.

This, is indeed, very commendable.  CASS had degenerated to a point where it could no longer carry out its functions as instituted by late Professor Ake.  The centre existed more in name than action.

Therefore, the promise by the Rivers State Government to liaise with the Board of CASS to reinvigorate it is a welcome development. This, in our mind, is a befitting honour to this great son of the state.

Interestingly, Governor Amaechi also at the occasion promised to continue to honour other Rivers indigenes that have excelled in various fields of endeavour as a way of encouraging the youths and upcoming generations to emulate their good works.

By this step, Governor Amaechi has again demonstrated his desire to see that honour is given to whom it is due. Our inability to honour great achievers in our society has been a sour point in our development process as a nation. People hardly see role models to emulate. Rather, recognition and honour are lavished on those who in no way have made positive impacts on society.

Rightly, in his lecture, the ex-Botswana leader said of late Professor Ake: “We are here to celebrate the life and contributions of one of Africa’s intellectually productive sons”.

Ake, it would be recalled, combined deep intellectual erudition with prophetic insights, and clearly but courageously articulated these in numerous essays which have turned out to be important references in the study of political economy of resource-rich sub-Sahara Africa.

He was a “fearless intellectual who combined a blend of pragmatism, radicalism and progressive scholarship with both intellectual honesty and vigor”, said ex-President Mogae in his lecture.

Professor Ake was born February 18, 1939 in Omoku, Rivers State.  He attended Kings College, Lagos between 1952 and 1958.  He also studied at Columbia University, New York and later became an Assistant Professor in 1966.

He was appointed a professor of political economy at Carleton University, Canada at the age of 31. He lectured there from 1969 to 1977.  Professor Ake also lectured at the University of Port Harcourt, where he became the Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences, before his sojourn to establish the CASS.

Trending

Exit mobile version