Fela Kuti is widely regarded as the most persecuted musician in modern history, a fearless artist who paid a brutal price for speaking truth to power.
For decades, Fela used his music as a weapon against corruption, dictatorship, and injustice in Nigeria. Because of this, he was arrested more than 200 times and appeared in court 356 times mostly for daring to criticise successive Nigerian governments.
The persecution reached a horrifying peak on February 18, 1977.
Over 1,000 soldiers stormed his commune, Kalakuta Republic, in a coordinated military assault. The compound was burned to the ground. Residents were beaten and brutalised. His elderly mother, Funmilayo Ransome-Kut, a respected nationalist and women’s rights activist was thrown from a window during the attack. She later died from the injuries she sustained.
The Shrine, his iconic performance venue and political platform, was shut down — a direct strike at both his livelihood and his voice.
But intimidation did not silence him.
Even after being assaulted, Fela performed on stage in bandages. In an act of defiance following the 1977 raid, he carried his mother’s coffin to the military barracks in protest. Rather than retreat, he released even more openly anti-regime music.
In 1984, under the military government of Muhammadu Buhari, Fela was jailed on alleged “currency smuggling” charges. Amnesty International declared the case politically motivated and recognised him as a prisoner of conscience. He spent about 20 months in prison before being released when Ibrahim Babangida took power.
Throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, violent raids, destruction of property, confiscation of recordings, arrests, and surveillance remained constant tactics used against him. In 1993, he and members of his band were again arrested and charged in another high-profile case — proof that the harassment followed him until the later years of his career.
His music did not hide behind metaphors. Songs like “I.T.T.” directly accused powerful elites and multinational interests of corruption. By naming names, he intensified state hostility but he refused to soften his message.
Fela Kuti was not merely a musician.
He was a movement.
And the system fought him like one.
Yet despite arrests, beatings, imprisonment, and destruction, his voice never broke.
That is why history remembers him not just as the pioneer of Afrobeat but as one of the most persecuted and defiant artists that is widely regarded as the most persecuted musician in modern history.
A fearless artist who paid a brutal price for speaking truth to power.