ForeverMissed
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This memorial website was created in memory of Peter Palmer Ekeh, born on August 8, 1937 and passed away on November 17, 2020. He is remembered as a husband, father, grandfather, and scholar.
December 1, 2021
Rest on, Prof. Ekeh. Your work lives on to inspire multiple generations of scholars. May your family and friends be comforted by the good memories they shared with you.
August 21, 2021
A great scholar, brilliant, erudite and collegial. My Professor in the Political Science Department at the University of Ibadan from 1976-1979. Contributed to giving his students, me included, a solid foundation in political science. His work lives on. I particularly love
Ekeh, P. (1975). Colonialism and the Two Publics in Africa: A Theoretical Statement. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 17(1), 91-112. May his soul Rest In Peace and his family be comforted and strengthened. May his legacy wax ever strong.
August 8, 2021
August 8, 2021
Gone but not forgotten. You live on in your children. Rest in peace
December 15, 2020
December 15, 2020
It’s really hard to believe that you are no more! A good heart has stopped beating, a good soul ascended to heaven!

All through the years I worked with you, I have known you better and what you value most: people. To him, his employees are like his family. He clearly makes known that everyone plays an important role. Working with him was not like working with a boss but a loving father.

Through your leadership abilities, I have really evolved workwise and personally. You always commend my efforts, which are all grounded on your guidance and motivation. Your constant guidance and motivation has helped me in the past and your memories will continue to do so in the future. I feel so blessed that I have worked with one of the best bosses in the world. I have learned priceless lessons from you. Thanks a lot for your support.

Words cannot express the grief I feel on your passing on. But I am consoled with the words of Saint Paul; you have fought the good fight, finished the race and kept the faith. Now there is laid up for you the crown of righteousness… (2 Timothy 4:7-8).

I can confidently say that your works will sing your praise.
Forever in my heart!
Rest on Daddy, till will meet part to part no more!
Adieu Best Boss Ever!

December 13, 2020
December 13, 2020
May papa’s soul rest in perfect peace and loving memories remain with family and friends
December 13, 2020
December 13, 2020
Uncle, migwo. This is Dupe. What can I say? Except to thank God for your life. You were such a blessing. So humble and down to earth. It was an honor for my family to have had the relationship with you for over 30 years. I loved and miss our discourse. It is well. Rest in perfect peace sir.
December 11, 2020
December 11, 2020
I never really got to meet with you in person. Your literary works was an expression of your passion for the urhobo nation. The drive was splendid and I peer through those histories, I can only be thankful for your contributions toward humanity.
You may have gone to rest but you literally live in our hearts. We are determined to carry on from where you stop. We will tell the stories to the generations yet unborn and we shall remember you our dear prof for all you have done.
May the almighty continue to remember you for all your good.
Adieu Ose'
Rest on Great one

Dr. Oke Obadaseraye
FMCortho, Mch ortho( Edinburgh)

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Recent Tributes
December 1, 2021
Rest on, Prof. Ekeh. Your work lives on to inspire multiple generations of scholars. May your family and friends be comforted by the good memories they shared with you.
August 21, 2021
A great scholar, brilliant, erudite and collegial. My Professor in the Political Science Department at the University of Ibadan from 1976-1979. Contributed to giving his students, me included, a solid foundation in political science. His work lives on. I particularly love
Ekeh, P. (1975). Colonialism and the Two Publics in Africa: A Theoretical Statement. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 17(1), 91-112. May his soul Rest In Peace and his family be comforted and strengthened. May his legacy wax ever strong.
August 8, 2021
August 8, 2021
Gone but not forgotten. You live on in your children. Rest in peace
His Life
December 11, 2020
Peter Palmer Ekeh was born in 1937 and raised in the area around Okpara Inland in the Western Niger Delta region of Nigeria, during British Colonial times. 


His favorite subject in school was Latin and he wanted to study Classics at the university but received a scholarship to study Economics at the University of Ibadan in 1961. He graduated in 1964 at the top of his class. He gained admission to Stanford University in California to study Sociology.


In May 1965 he married Helen Akarue and both left for the United States a few months later.


After receiving his Master’s degree at Stanford University, he continued his studies at the University of California, Berkeley where he studied Sociology and Psychoanalytic Theory. His Ph.D. thesis topic was on the Sociology of Nigerian Dreams. He taught for three years at the University of Riverside, California, where he completed work for his first book, Social Exchange Theory: Two Traditions (Harvard University Press, 1974).


In this first stint in the U.S., three of his five children were born: Onome, Akpofure, and Onoriode. 


He returned to Nigeria where he first taught at the Ahmadu Bello University and then settled to teach at the University of Ibadan for the long haul.


Gaga and Ese were born in Zaria, in northern Nigeria, and Ibadan, southwestern, Nigeria, respectively.

He published many highly respected books and articles and was highly regarded in his field of study. Many of his publications have been considered “classics” by scholars. In 1988, he returned to the U.S. as a professor of African American studies at the University of Buffalo from which he retired at 15 years in 2013.


He founded the Urhobo Historical Society in 1999, which has become the premier vehicle through which Urhobo culture and history have been studied and preserved.


Peter Ekeh passed into glory peacefully on November 17, 2020, at 12:25 a.m.  He was wholly devoted to his family and was very proud of all his grandchildren, Ruke, Reya, Zoe, Siobhan, Tega, Julian, and Eli. He will always be remembered as a kind intellectual with a beautiful spirit and a warm smile. 


Recent stories

Prof Peter P. Ekeh: A tribute to my distinguished lecturer, By Isaac N. Obasi

January 20, 2021

https://sundiatapost.com/prof-peter-p-ekeh-a-tribute-to-my-distinguished-lecturer-by-isaac-n-obasi/

Prof Peter P. Ekeh: A tribute to my distinguished lecturer,
By Isaac N. Obasi
November 18, 2020 

The news of the death of Prof. Peter P. Ekeh which was carried yesterday by Sundiata Post and tilted: ‘Tears As World Acclaimed Nigerian Scholar, Prof Peter Ekeh, Passes On At 83’ (See https://sundiatapost.com/tears-as-world-acclaimed-nigerian-scholar-prof-peter-ekeh-passes-on-at-83/) came to me as a shock as one of his students. The joy, however, is that he lived a fulfilled life and left an indelible mark globally on the sands of academic and intellectual history.  

One was very privileged to have been taught by many erudite and internationally distinguished lecturers at the University of Ibadan’s Political Science Department in the 70s and 80s of which Professor Peter P. Ekeh was remarkably outstanding. We saw him in our undergraduate years as a father figure who was very unassuming in the way he carried himself.

We were lucky to have been taught by him a political sociology course, containing one particular topic in the course outline that distinguished him more and more internationally. I am talking about his famous article titled: ‘Colonialism and the Two Publics in Africa: A Theoretical Statement’. It was very intellectually exciting listening to this topic from the horse’s mouth in his class. As a distinguished and well-known professor, I cannot be writing his biography here for Prof. Peter Ekeh is an open book. But I can only touch on an aspect that I can easily comment upon based on an experience with him. 

But before going further, it is fitting to pay homage to my undergraduate supervisor, Prof. Alex Gboyega, whose high sense of humility in scholarship and teaching during our undergraduate years has significantly impacted on my academic career. I do not take it for granted any time I have the opportunity to acknowledge him publicly when talking about my University of Ibadan (UI) lecturers. This is one of such opportunities and one is very pleased that Prof. Gboyega is still strong and kicking. Any student must be highly blessed to be supervised by a lecturer who could be said to be good and exemplary. The outstanding virtues of selfless service of those years are fast vanishing in our academic institutions these days. What a pity.

A tribute to Professor Peter Ekeh is a delight because of two memorable encounters with him after graduating from UI. The first meeting was at the Kongo Conference Hotel, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, during the National Conference on Nigeria Since Independence, March 1983. The conference was organised by the Nigeria Since Independence History Panel chaired by Prof. T. N. Tamuno (eminent historian and former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ibadan). On arrival at the conference, I ran into my distinguished and highly revered lecturer, Prof. Peter Ekeh. I attended the prestigious conference as a mere (and somehow timid) graduate assistant from the then University of Sokoto and fresh from the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC). And surprised to see me, Prof. Ekeh asked why I was there, and I replied that “Sir, I am here to present a paper”. He became more delightfully surprised hearing that. He then made a joke that encouraged and gave me confidence in my career. The joke was “let us see how the Misters will compete with the PhDs” (i.e. the Drs). My paper for the conference, which came out from my undergraduate research project (supervised by the then Dr. Alex Gboyaga) to my delightful surprise was accepted on its merit by the panel. At the end of the day, he (and my former VC Prof. Tamuno) were very happy at my performance at the conference. Interestingly, the paper was among my first publications as a very young lecturer. It was a confidence-boosting experience. 

The second encounter was at the State University of New York at Buffalo (SUNY at Buffalo), United States of America, where Prof. Ekeh had settled after leaving UI. After over two decades of my graduation from UI, it was a great privilege to be appointed a visiting scholar (on short fellowship) in 2006 in this prestigious institution. I secured the fellowship without any knowledge that Prof. Ekeh was at SUNY at Buffalo. On settling down there, I was informed that a great Nigerian scholar was in the great institution. The rest is now history as all could guess rightly how happy he was to see me, coming directly from the University of Botswana, Southern Africa, at the time.

One of the good qualities of great scholars is to build confidence in their students who are very thirsty for good mentorship experience. There appears to be a vanishing culture of good mentorship also these days. We owe a lot to students in our own generation in keeping this encouraging culture going. 


Prof. P. P. Ekeh played his part by challenging young minds to think critically and to excel. I count myself very lucky to have benefited from Prof. Peter P. Ekeh’s fountain of knowledge. May God bless his gentle soul – AMEN.       

•Prof. Isaac N. Obasi of the University of Abuja, is a Visiting (Adjunct) Research Professor at the Anti-Corruption Academy of Nigeria, (ACAN), ICPC, Email: nnamdizik@gmail.com

Peter P. Ekeh:Reflections on the Future of Political Science Scholarship in Nigeria. By Tunji Olaopa

January 20, 2021

https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2020/12/20/peter-p-ekeh-reflections-on-the-future-of-political-science-scholarship-in-nigeria/

Peter P. Ekeh: Reflections on the Future of Political Science Scholarship in Nigeria
December 20, 2020 
by Tunji Olaopa

Just some few weeks ago, the global community of Africanists and African scholars woke to the very sad news of the demise of world-renowned scholar, Peter Ekeh. There is no serious scholar of African studies, or even African-American Studies who has not heard of Ekeh; or even more, who has not read some of Ekeh’s defining intellectual contributions to the understanding of postcolonial Africa. When in 1975, Peter Ekeh wrote and published “Colonialism and the Two Publics in Africa,” he would be coherently and systematically dismantling many years of political theorizing about Africa and her social dynamics. With the idea of the “two publics,” we came to a deeply fundamental understanding of how African polities and postcolonies function.

In the radical and most tempestuous company of others, like Claude Ake, Richard Joseph, Billy Dudley, and many others, African studies, and especially the discipline of Political Science, became disconnected from Western political pontifications. Between them, we can say that these scholars initiated what we can call a Machiavellian moment with the discipline of political science. Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince became notorious not only for the discourse on power and governance that it generated, which stands against the political morality instituted by Aristotle, but also his perception about political theorizing ought to be done. While Aristotle and Aristotelians conceive of politics as being moderated by morality—since, for them, the end of all politics is the ability to live the good life—Machiavelli insisted that politics must be outlined within a realist frame that present it as it is, rather than as it ought to be. And this is why The Prince presented a stark analysis of power and power relations between the prince and its subjects.

For Machiavelli, the first condition for any successful rule is for the prince to learn how not to be good!
Ekeh and his intellectual contemporaries also immediately saw the danger in theorizing African political realities from a western political prism and perspectives. In Social Science as Imperialism, Claude Ake made the broad but radical claim that western social science writings and theorizing on third world realities constitutes an imperialism. Ake makes three correlated claims: (a) western social science imposes capitalist values and development on the third world; (b) social science analysis was bent towards making the third world more like the west; and (c) it initiated a mode of analysis that is hierarchical in the understanding of human development. In furthering this analysis, Ekeh brought an even more imposing intellectual stature. With initial undergraduate and graduate studies in sociology, Ekeh brought the full weight of sociological theory to bear on the analysis of political realities and dynamics in Africa. In “Colonialism and Social Structure,” his inaugural lecture delivered in 1980 at the University of Ibadan, Peter Ekeh attempted to “update our sociological conceptualization of colonialism over and above the colonial situation.”

While Georges Balandier’s concept of the “colonial situation” was sufficiently revolutionary in bringing together the often-separated understanding of colonization and the various reactions and responses to it, Ekeh argues that the full implication of the “colonial situation” fails to take note of the epochal significance of colonialism beyond the colonial situation to the postcolonial and the supra-individual implications it has on the postcolonies. In other words, colonialism becomes sociologically and politically more interesting in its generation of “social formations of supra-individual entities and constructs.” And these social formations were motivated by the “confrontations, contradictions, and incompatibilities of the colonial situation” to cast a long shadow on postcolonial realities and the significance of social structures in Africa.

This analysis, for instance, according to Ekeh, cast serious intellectual doubt on the capability of concepts like decolonization, independence, or even neo-colonialism to enable a proper understanding of the postcolonial situation in Africa.
Peter Ekeh’s understanding of the epochal nature of colonialism in its establishment of social formations that poison postcolonial social structures undermined the postcolonial intellectual assumption that gave the Ibadan School of History its imposing stature. Given the conviction of the advocates of the Ibadan School of History that African history goes deeper than the instrumental readings provided by the colonial historians and anthropologist, they reached the conclusion that colonialism was an episodic incidence from which the continent will eventually pick up the pieces. Unfortunately, Peter Ekeh’s epochal analysis has been borne out by historical realities after the official termination of colonialism. Thus, between the transformed, migrated and emergent social structures, the postcolonial predicament and agonies of African postcolonies were almost determined.

With this fine-tuned and sophisticated analysis about the supra-individual social formations and entities that have come to determine sociopolitical relations and realities, Peter Ekeh therefore leaves for indigenous political scientists, and for African studies, a huge agenda for carrying forward the fundamental task of coming to terms with the conditions of the postcolonies. And this task for political science theorization is even more daunting from two perspectives. On the one hand, there is the need to square Ekeh’s Africa-centric agenda with the often-peculiar national outlook and dynamics operating within specific states. Nigeria constitutes a most outstanding instance in this regard. Each of Ekeh’s terms, concepts, arguments and discursive framework must be delicately unpacked in attempting to bring them to bear on understanding the Nigerian condition and predicament. And there cannot be any easy co-optation or deployment of Ekeh’s position to analyze Nigeria’s political situations and crises. What light does Ekeh’s analysis shed on Nigeria’s post-independence political realities? How does the relationship between the social structures—indigenous, migrated and emergent—explain Nigeria’s continuing insistence on operating a lopsided federal framework? How does that lopsided federalism eventuate in the civil war, and then the #EndSARS protests?

On the other hand, the urgency of the need to bring a sophisticated political analysis and theorization to bear on Nigeria’s predicament is further complicated by global developments. Since Peter Ekeh theorized the barest framework for political understanding and development of the African realities, the global socioeconomic and political realities have become even more complicated—from liberal and neo-Marxian identity postulations to global injustice and inequalities to the rise of Trump and nationalism and populism, as well as the emergence of China as a global hegemonic force. The internet, media technologies and the social media have also become significant social forces enabling many decisive developments, from Tiananmen Square to Tahrir Square, and from Occupy Wall Street to Occupy Nigeria. and recently, the global ravage of the COVID-19 has further put in bold relief the political fissures and fragmentation of global inequalities and hegemonies.

The fundamental question is simple: how ought political science and political theorization in Nigeria to proceed in this dizzying world of complex political developments? And what lessons can we learn from Peter Ekeh’s intellectual admonitions and argumentations? The first lesson is straightforward. For Ekeh, disciplinary boundaries and framework are limiting for a deeper analysis and understanding of African and Nigerian postcolonial predicament. Ekeh himself deployed so many intellectual sensibilities and framework, from sociology to political science, and from African-American studies to history. This is only obvious: a complex postcolonial predicament cannot ever be amenable to single disciplinary observation and analysis. And yet unfortunately, most African and Nigerian political scientists are still bound by disciplinary isolation of political science from transdisciplinary necessities. The second issue is a corollary of the first. And this is that political theorization cannot be saddled with the search for easy answers to complex questions and issues. The academic reality in Nigeria is such that scholars generate academic papers to serve the urgency of promotion and career development. This therefore leads to spurious analysis that often fail to tease out deep-seated anomalies and even deeper (re)solutions.

The final lesson I want to draw is not new. It concerns the urgent need for an engaged political science theorization that is in tune with the demands of its contexts and the imperative of relevance. Political science is not just any ordinary discipline. There is a reason why Peter Ekeh made it his adopted discipline, and the theoretic base from which to launch his interdisciplinary analyses. Let us even be bold to say political science is the king of the social sciences. But it demands more than disciplinary pride and adulation; on the contrary, it places a huge onus on political scientists to prove its relevance to the task of bringing to light the terrible theoretic and practical elements of Nigeria’s predicament, underdevelopment, mal-governance, insecurity, corruption and unemployment in ways that will activate policy directions for politicians, development practitioners and public administrators. This brings us full cycle back to Niccolò Machiavelli, and the tradition of politically and nationally engaged political science theorizing. The Prince is meant as a manual for governance. Its purpose was to orient the governor of Florence on how that city-state could be made better in terms of its responsibilities to its subjects and to other city-states around. It is a manual meant to ensure that Florence continued to flourish.

Political science owes its context that responsibility of clarifying and deepening the socioeconomic and political understanding of the existence of the Nigerian state and its well-being vis-à-vis her citizens. The Nigerian political science community owes a debt of honor to the Nigerian context to keep pushing forward the boundaries of democratic theories and experimentation in the direction of good governance. Thus, from pedagogical dynamics of the context of the political science curricula to the tradition of political science argumentations, Nigerian political scientists, the Nigerian Political Science Association (NPSA) and the political science community needs to craft an agenda informed by praxis—the critical combination of theory and practice that Nigeria urgently needs to make sense of its political development and its democratic responsibilities to her citizens’ well-being. That is what Peter Ekeh’s theorization intended for us to achieve.
Prof. Tunji Olaopa is a retired Federal Permanent Secretary & Professor of Public Administration, National Institute For Policy and Strategic Studies, Kuru, Jos  (tolaopa2003@gmail.com tolaopa@isgpp.com.ng)

Remembering Peter Ekeh (1937-2020), By Ebere Onwudiwe

January 20, 2021

https://opinion.premiumtimesng.com/2020/11/23/remembering-peter-ekeh-1937-2020-by-ebere-onwudiwe/
Remembering Peter Ekeh (1937-2020),

By Ebere Onwudiwe
 November 23, 2020 


Although he was a sociological theorist of note, as evidenced by his well-received book  Social Exchange Theory: The Two Traditionspublished by Harvard University Press in 1974, he became world-famous with the “Colonialism and the Two Publics in Africa”… That piece made him one of the most cited scholars in African politics and history.
Suppose you are a student of development studies and focused on Africa. In that case, chances are you have met Peter P. Ekeh through his books, journal articles, and public intellectual debates. Primarily, you would have read “Colonialism and the Two Publics in Africa: A Theoretical Statement”, which was published 45 years ago. That’s how I met Peter the first time, in one gripping page after another. I remember saying to myself, this is one brilliant Igbo man!

In 1994, I met Peter in person for the first time at a Workshop for Development Practitioners in Washington, DC. As we waited for the meeting to start, one conceited American Africanist was zealously telling a few others how African languages don’t have a word for window. To prove his point, he turned to me and said, ‘what is the word for a window in your language, Ebere?’ Name tag familiarity. I nearly told him that the Igbo word for ‘window’ was onye iberibe (idiot); instead, I blurted out the truth mpio. He looked confused and deflated. Cool.


Professor Peter P. Ekeh

As Peter and I were walking back to the hotel at the end of the day, I was excitedly berating the smug young scholar in fluent Igbo. I harped that he should not have generalised his experience with one African language in a continent of 3,000 different ethnic groups and over 2,000 languages in Igbo. Peter listened with attentive interest as I went on and on, trying to impress him. Then with a laugh, as if to save me from my vanity, he said, “Young man, I don’t understand Igbo; I am not Igbo.” Deflation. Confusion. Silence!

But his name was Ekeh, like my own Owerri brother, Leo Stan Ekeh! I had to come to America to learn that all brilliant Ekehs are not Igbo! That’s how my long friendship with this renowned sociologist started.

Although he was a sociological theorist of note, as evidenced by his well-received book  Social Exchange Theory: The Two Traditions published by Harvard University Press in 1974, he became world-famous with the “Colonialism and the Two Publics in Africa…” journal article mentioned above. That piece made him one of the most cited scholars in African politics and history. It established Peter as a leading African political sociologist. And that was well deserved, because some elements of his theory are still useful in analysing Africa’s post-colonial condition.

Take his notion of two publics, the primordial (private) and the civic, with different moral imperatives in dialectical bond with each other. Unlike in the western world, where there is a universal ethical framework based on the Judeo-Christian tradition that, for the most part, guides the behaviour of citizens in both the private and civic publics, our citizens in post-colonial Africa live in two worlds.

Some claim nowadays that in the deep penetration of corruption in every nook and cranny of Nigerian society, Peter’s theory of the two publics can no longer hold. However, it is not a fair reading of his two publics theory. It is still true that because of colonial interference with their social formations, many African countries do not have a single public yet.
His theoretical statement claims that most Westernised post-colonial Africans have little moral inhibition when they operate in the civic public – reflecting the Na your papa job(?) mentality in our public service. That’s why in Nigeria, for example, some members of the ruling elite loot the public purse like there is no tomorrow. These elites in politics are guilty of the culture of exploitation introduced to the colonisers’ civic public. These include cheating, nepotism, and citizens’ abuse, making them internal colonisers in the post-colonial times. On the other hand, the primordial realm of ethnic loyalties operates on traditional moral imperatives. These are also binding on the exploitative elites when they work in the primordial public outside Abuja and other urban-based government power centres in Nigeria’s case; a veritable point of the overused cliché, “when in Rome, do as the Romans do.”

Some claim nowadays that in the deep penetration of corruption in every nook and cranny of Nigerian society, Peter’s theory of the two publics can no longer hold. However, it is not a fair reading of his two publics theory. It is still true that because of colonial interference with their social formations, many African countries do not have a single public yet.

But more than his profound contributions to Africa’s political sociology, Peter was, first and foremost, a passionate family man who gave up his position at the prestigious University of Ibadan for family reasons. As our friendship grew, I found that he gradually lost interest in researching and writing for academic credit. Our phone conversations and emails became increasingly all about Nigeria and what we could do to help out during the Abacha era.

As things continued to head south in Nigeria, Peter shifted his enormous intellectual energy into building the award-winning Urhobo Historical Society and collapsed ANSD’s website into it. He was very proud of his Urhobo culture and was not afraid to defend it robustly, as Professor Bala Usman (RIP) found out.

Enter the famed Wilberforce Conference on Nigerian Federalism that looked for options for resolving Nigeria’s Crises of Governance, which I convened in 1997. The founding of The Association of Nigerian Scholars for Dialogue (ANSD), of which Peter and I were respectively the founding president and vice president, followed. As things continued to head south in Nigeria, Peter shifted his enormous intellectual energy into building the award-winning Urhobo Historical Society and collapsed ANSD’s website into it. He was very proud of his Urhobo culture and was not afraid to defend it robustly, as Professor Bala Usman (RIP) found out. But back to the Wilberforce Conference on Nigerian Federalism.

That conference coincided with two others holding on the same 29th of May 1997: “The future of Reporting on Africa” by Voice of America (VOA), and the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) meeting in Harare, Zimbabwe. These three conferences were covered simultaneously by the Cable Public Affairs Network (C-SPAN), a private, non-profit American cable television network. From our Nigerian federalism conference in Wilberforce, VOA veteran, Nelson Brown (RIP), reported to the C-SPAN moderator, Charlayne Hunter-Gault, a prominent American civil rights activist and journalist. In contrast, Nigeria’s indomitable Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem (RIP) reported from the OAU meeting in Harare. It was a packed day indeed! When, in a light mood, Ms Hunter-Gault asked Mr. Brown whether the Nigerian scholars gathered in Wilberforce had resolved the Nigeria crises there, the audience collectively chuckled.

“Not quite yet,” replied Mr. Brown, before he professionally proceeded to report on the magnificent keynote address of Professor Peter Ekeh at the Wilberforce conference. You could hear a pin drop. Peter always had that effect. May he rest in perfect peace!

Ebere Onwudiwe is a distinguished fellow at the Centre for Democracy and Development (CDD), Abuja. Please send your comments to this number on WhatsApp: +234 (0)701 625 8025; messages only, no calls.

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