Fela Kuti Wins Grammys Lifetime Achievement Award

Long crowned by his legion of fans as the king of Afrobeat, the late Fela Kuti is finally being recognised by the global music industry. The Nigerian star will posthumously receive a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Grammys – almost three decades after his death at the age of 58. “Fela has been in the hearts of the people for such a long time. Now the Grammys have acknowledged it, and it’s a double victory,” his musician son Seun Kuti tells the BBC. “It’s bringing balance to a Fela story,” he added. Rikki Stein, a long-time friend and manager of the late musician, said the recognition by the Grammys is “better late than never”. “Africa hasn’t in the past rated very highly in their interests. I think that’s changing quite a bit of late,” Stein tells the BBC. Following the global success of Afrobeats, a genre inspired by Fela’s sound, the Grammys introduced the category of Best African Performance in 2024. This year, Nigerian superstar Burna Boy also has a nomination in the Best Global Music Album category. But Fela Kuti will be the first African to receive a Lifetime Achievement Award, albeit posthumously. The award was first presented in 1963, external to American singer and actor Bing Crosby. Other musicians who will receive the award this year include Mexican-American guitarist Carlos Santana, Chaka Khan, the American singer known as the Queen of Funk, and Paul Simon. Fela Kuti’s family, as well friends and colleagues, will be attending the Grammys to receive his award. “The global human tapestry needs this, not just because it’s my father,” Seun Kuti tells the BBC. A man walks in front of mural in Lagos of Fela Kuti in a red jumpsuit playing a saxophone, with the words ‘Lagos, Home For All’. Stein said it is important to recognise Fela as a man who championed the cause of people who had “drawn life’s short straw”, adding that he “castigated any form of social injustice, corruption [and] mismanagement” in government. “So it would be impossible to ignore that aspect of Fela’s legacy,” he tells the BBC. For Fela Anikulapo Kuti was not simply a musician, but also a cultural theorist, political agitator and the undisputed architect of Afrobeat – which is distinct from, but ultimately led to, the modern sound of Afrobeats. He pioneered the Afrobeat genre alongside drummer Tony Allen, blending West African rhythms, jazz, funk, highlife, extended improvisation, call-and-response vocals and politically charged lyricism. Across a career spanning roughly three decades until his death in 1997, Fela Kuti released more than 50 albums and built a body of work that fused music with ideology, rhythm with resistance, and performance with protest. His music incurred the wrath of Nigeria’s then-military regimes. In 1977, after the release of the album Zombie, which satirised government soldiers as obedient, brainless enforcers, his compound in the main city, Lagos, was raided. Black and white shot of Fela Kuti with his back to the audience and facing his back-up singers and band. He is singing with one hand up and finger pointing and the other hand behind his back in a pose like a torero. Known as Kalakuta Republic, the property was burned, residents were brutalised, and his mother, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, later died from injuries sustained during the assault. Rather than retreat, Fela Kuti responded through music and defiance. He took his mother’s coffin to government offices and released the song Coffin for Head of State, turning grief into protest. The musician’s ideology was a blend of pan-Africanism, anti-imperialism, and African-rooted socialism. Fela Kuti’s mother was hugely influential in his life, helping shape his political consciousness, while the US-born singer and activist Sandra Izsadore helped sharpen his revolutionary outlook He was born Olufela Olusegun Oludotun Ransome-Kuti, but dropped Ransome because of its Western roots. In 1978, he married 27 women in a highly publicised ceremony, bringing together partners, performers, organisers and co-architects of the cultural and communal vision of Kalakuta Republic. Fela Kuti endured repeated arrests, beatings, censorship and surveillance by the security forces. Yet repression only amplified his influence. “He wasn’t doing what he was doing to win awards. He was interested in liberation. Freeing the mind,” Stein tells the BBC. “He was fearless. He was determined.” Fela Kuti’s musical evolution was shaped not only by Nigeria but also by Ghana. During the 1950s and 1960s, highlife music, pioneered by Ghanaian musicians such as ET Mensah, Ebo Taylor and Pat Thomas, became a defining sound across West Africa. Its melodic guitar lines, horn sections, dance rhythms, and cosmopolitan identity deeply influenced Fela Kuti’s early musical direction. He spent time in Ghana absorbing highlife’s structure, horn phrasing, and dance-oriented arrangements before fusing it with jazz, funk, the rhythms of his own Yoruba people, and political storytelling. The DNA of highlife can be heard in Afrobeat’s melodic sensibility and its balance between groove and sophistication. In this sense, Afrobeat is not only Nigerian. It is West African, pan-African, and diasporic in origin, carrying Ghana’s musical imprint at its foundation. On stage, Fela Kuti cut an unmistakable figure. Often bare-chested or draped in the wax-printed fabric popular across West Africa, hair shaped into a crisp Afro, saxophone in hand, eyes alert with intensity, he commanded a large band of more than 20 musicians. His performances at the Afrika Shrine in Lagos were legendary, part concert, part political rally, part spiritual ceremony. Stein recalls that performances at the Shrine were immersive rather than conventional. “When Fela played, nobody applauded,” he tells the BBC. “The audience wasn’t separate. They were part of it.” Music was not spectacle. It was communion. Nigerian singer Fela Kuti, in a pale blue long-sleeved shirt with bits of yellow and pink embroidery, smiles and holds up his hands towards the audience at Vredenburg in Utrecht, Netherlands on 3 November 1988 Fela Kuti’s visual identity was shaped in part by artist and designer Lemi Ghariokwu, who created 26 of his album covers between 1974 and 1993. “Fela has been…

Read More

Alleged ₦80.2bn Kogi Fraud: How ₦3.1bn Kogi LGs Funds Were Lodged into E-traders Account in Eight Months — Witness

The trial of former Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Adoza Bello, before Justice Emeka Nwite of the Federal High Court, Maitama, Abuja, continued on Thursday, January 29, 2026, with the continuation of testimony by Prosecution Witness Seven, PW7, Olomotane Egoro, a compliance officer with Access Bank. Bello is being prosecuted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, on a 19-count charge bordering on money laundering to the tune of ₦80,246,470,088.88 (Eighty Billion, Two Hundred and Forty-Six Million, Four Hundred and Seventy Thousand and Eighty-Nine Naira, Eighty-Eight Kobo). Led in evidence by prosecution counsel, Kemi Pinheiro, SAN, Egoro gave a detailed breakdown of financial transactions involving the accounts of Fazab Business Enterprise and E-traders International Limited, which allegedly received funds traced to Kogi State local government councils. After reminding the witness that he was still on oath, Pinheiro applied that Exhibit 33(8), the statement of account of Fazab Business Enterprise be shown to the witness. He drew his attention to inflows recorded on May 6, 2022, and May 9, 2022. Responding, Egoro told the court that on May 6, 2022, there were 11 inflows into the Fazab Business Enterprise account. He confirmed that the inflows came from different local government councils in Kogi State, including Yagba East, Yala, Ida and Okene. On the transactions of May 9, 2022, the witness stated that there were three transactions, comprising two inflows. When asked to confirm whether the inflows originated from Ibaji and Dekina Local Government Areas, Egoro answered in the affirmative, saying, “Yes, my Lord, I can confirm it came from the two local governments.” In summation, the witness told the court that the total inflow on May 6, 2022, amounted to ₦103,375,059.73, while the two inflows on May 9, 2022, totalled ₦14,563,702.56, bringing the cumulative sum to ₦117,938,762.29. Pinheiro further drew the witness’s attention to cash withdrawals that followed the inflows. Asked to identify the individual who made a ₦10 million cash withdrawal from the account, Egoro replied, “My Lord, it is Yakubu Siyaka A.” He confirmed that Yakubu Siyaka A. made cash withdrawals on several dates, namely May 9, 10, 11, 13, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 23, 24 and 26, 2022. In total, the witness said the cash withdrawals made by Yakubu Siyaka A. between May 9 and May 26, 2022, amounted to ₦116,600,000. When asked whether, in view of his testimony, almost the entire inflow of ₦117,938,762.29 from the local governments in May 2022 was withdrawn in cash, Egoro answered, “Yes, my Lord.” The witness further told the court that by May 31, 2022, only a balance of about N1,00, 289,41 (One million, Two hundred and Eighty-nine Naira Forty-one kobo) remained in the Fazab account. Turning to June and July 2022, Egoro testified that there were consistent inflows from various Kogi State local governments. He stated that the total inflow for June 2022 was ₦108,793,086.69, while July 2022 recorded inflows of ₦141,718,056.30, bringing the total inflow for both months to ₦250,511,142.99. He confirmed that during the same period, Yakubu Siyaka A. continued to make cash withdrawals from the account. According to him, the total cash withdrawals in June and July 2022 amounted to ₦198,900,000. When asked if almost ₦200 million was withdrawn in cash from the inflows of the two months, the witness responded, “Yes, my Lord, that’s correct.” Egoro further testified that the pattern of inflows from Kogi State local governments and corresponding cash withdrawals persisted in August and September 2022. He also confirmed that similar credit entries and withdrawal patterns were observed in October, November and December 2022.  

Read More

EFCC Arraigns BFI Group Corporation, Six others for Alleged €100m Fraud

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, on Thursday, January 29, 2026 arraigned BFI Group Corporation, Reuben M. Jaja, Uzor Chidi Jerry, David Femi James, Imeobong Jumbo Udom, Adeola Edward and Emeka Emmanuel Okorie before Justice M.S Idris of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, High Court, Jabi, Abuja for alleged fraud to the tune of €100 million (One Hundred Million Euros). They were arraigned on a five-count amended charge bordering on fraud, conspiracy and false pretence. At Thursday’s proceedings, prosecution counsel, Ekele Iheanacho, SAN drew the attention of the court to an amended charge, dated January, 27, 2026 and filed the same date, asking the court that the same charge be read to the defendants to enable them take their plea. Count one reads: “That you, BFI GROUP CORPORATION, REUBEN M. JAJA, UZOR CHIDI JERRY, DAVID FEMI JAMES, IMEOBONG JUMBO UDOM, ADEOLU EDWARD, EMEKA EMMANUEL OKORIE and other persons (at large) between the 12th of August, 2020 and March, 2021 in Abuja within the jurisdiction of this Honourable court with intent to defraud, conspired amongst yourselves to induce the Central Bank of Nigeria to confer benefit on BFI Group Corporation by false pretence and thereby committed an offense contrary to and punishable under Section 8 (a) and 1 ( 3) of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Related Offenses Act.” Count two of the charge reads: “That you BFI GROUP CORPORATION and REUBEN M. JAJA between the 12th of August, 2020 and March 2021 in Abuja within the jurisdiction of this Honourable court with intent to defraud, did attempt to obtain Certificate of Capital Importation for the sum of €100,000,000 (One Hundred Million Euros) in favour of BFI Group Corporation by falsely claiming that the said amount was paid into account no. 010147 – EUR – CDACBN – 52 maintained by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) when you knew that no such account number existed in the CBN and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 8 (b) of the Advance Fee Fraud and other Fraud Related Offences Act, 2006 and punishable under Section 1(3) of the same Act.” They pleaded “not guilty” to all the charges when they were read to them, following which the prosecution counsel asked the court for a trial date and a date to respond to the defendants’ bail applications which were served to him right in the court. Speaking on behalf of other defence counsels, Chinedu Eze, counsel to the first and second defendants, prayed the court to accept his oral bail application, citing Section 32(1) to (3) of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act 2015, ACJA and Abiola Vs FRN 1995. He further urged the court to accept his oral application and grant the second defendant bail on self-recognition as a prominent king. Iheanacho objected to the submission of the defence counsel stating that the judicial precedents mentioned were wrongly cited as they only apply to suspects who are in detention and still under investigation, noting that the affected are no longer suspects in EFCC’s detention but defendants before the court. “My lord, a suspect who has been charged is no longer a suspect but a defendant and the application of Section 162 of ACJA guides and regulates the issue of bail in a criminal trial like this. I don’t know the first defendant and this is the first time I am seeing him. The reference also made by counsel in Abiola Vs FRN 1995 does not apply. It was before the advent of ACJA which guides us now. They have applied in writing and their applications are still pending before this court. For them to have applied for bail in writing while the prosecution is expected to reply, then turn around to say that it is now oral is not right. In the interest of fair hearing as guaranteed in Section 26 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic, they have to be consistent with their request. Such application is misplaced and should be discountenanced my lord,” he said. Justice Idris adjourned the matter till February 3, 2026 for ruling and adoption of bail and ordered the fourth defendant to be remanded in the EFCC holden facility, while others were remanded in Kuje Correctional Centre.  

Read More

Atalanta Offers Fenerbache €40m Ademola Lookman

Multiple Italian sources claimed Atalanta are ready to listen to a new Fenerbahce offer for Ademola Lookman, as €40m could be enough. Director of sport Devin Ozek is said to be in Italy for negotiations. The Nigeria international was away for the last month at the Africa Cup of Nations, helping his side secure third place in the tournament. He had his first start for the club of 2026 in last night’s 1-0 Champions League defeat to Union Saint-Gilloise, and the time has come to discuss his future. According to both Sportmediaset and Sportitalia in Italy, Fenerbahce have stepped up with a new proposal that is worth €9m per season wages for Lookman. Atalanta too are ready to listen to offers after picking up Giacomo Raspadori from Atletico Madrid, meaning he is no longer required. His contract only runs to June 2027, so he could be signed on loan with obligation to buy at the end of the season for a total package of circa €40m. That is €5m for the six-month loan, plus the obligation to buy for a further €35m. Lookman had pushed hard to join Inter last summer, but the asking price then was at least €50m.

Read More

NFF, Fulham Mourn Chukwueze’s Mother Demise

Nigeria football is in mourning, once more, following news of the death of Mrs Sarah Chukwueze, the mother of Super Eagles’ ace forward, Samuel Chukwueze, in the early hours of Thursday, 29th January 2026.   The announcement of Mrs Sarah Chukwueze’s passing was made by Samuel’s sister, Princess Chukwueze, and his brother, David, on their respective social media platforms in the morning of Thursday, 29th January 2026, stating that the matriarch of the family had died after a brief illness.   A distraught General Secretary of the Nigeria Football Federation, Dr Mohammed Sanusi, said: “We are aware that Mrs Sarah Chukwueze was a vital and supportive presence in the lives of her children, including our international player, Samuel Chukwueze. Samuel has always, at every opportunity, acknowledged his mother’s influence on his professional development. We are sad at her departure, coming only a few days after we had to mourn the sudden passing of the father of Super Eagles’ captain, Wilfred Ndidi.   “We pray that God will grant her eternal rest, and also grant those she has left behind, including Samuel and his siblings, the fortitude to bear the big loss.”   English Premier League side, Fulham Football Club has also sent condolence message to the bereaved forward.   “We are all with you, Chukwu. Sending you and your family our deepest condolences,” Fulham wrote on its official Twitter now X handle.

Read More

Iyabo Obasanjo Joins APC

Iyabo, the daughter of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, has joined the All Progressives Congress, APC, in Ogun State. This was revealed by a former chairman of Abeokuta South Local government, Biodun Ajayi, on Wednesday. Ajayi is also a close ally to Iyabo. He confirmed that her registration has been successfully concluded. Iyabo completed her e-registration on Tuesday at Ibogun, Ward 11, Ifo Local Government Area of the state. “I can confirm to you that Prof. Iyabo Obasanjo completed her online registration as a member of our great party, the APC, on Tuesday at Ibogun Ward 11 in Ifo Local Government,” Ajayi said.

Read More

Raheem Sterling Leaves Chelsea By Mutual Consent

Raheem Sterling left Chelsea by mutual consent on Wednesday, bringing a premature end to his time at the Premier League club three-and-a-half years after a $56.5 million move that failed to live up to expectations. Sterling, whose contract was due to expire in 2027, joined from Manchester City in 2022 as a serial title-winner but ended up an outcast – last playing for the club in May 2024. “We thank Raheem for the contribution he made while a Chelsea player and wish him well for the next stage in his career,” Chelsea said in a brief statement. The 31-year-old Sterling won 10 major trophies with City, including five Premier League titles. He was expected to help lead Chelsea to trophies but made only 45 league starts. He scored 14 goals and has not been involved for Chelsea this term. Sterling spent last season on loan at Arsenal but scored only one goal for Mikel Arteta’s team before returning to Stamford Bridge at the end of the campaign. Sterling began his career at Queens Park Rangers and went on to join Liverpool before a move to City in 2015. He was also part of England’s squad that both reached the semifinals of the 2018 World Cup and came runner-up in the European Championship in 2021.

Read More

Diezani Lavishes £2m on Shopping, Court Hears

Nigeria’s former oil minister spent £2million at Harrods and bought so many luxury goods that she ran out of space, a court heard today. Diezani Alison-Madueke, 65, faces claims she lived ‘a life of luxury’ in the UK at properties paid for and refurbished by energy industry figures seeking government contracts in Nigeria. It is alleged Alison-Madueke, minister of petroleum resources from April 2010 to May 2015, was given £100,000 in cash, had access to a private jet and chauffeur-driven car, and had the use of staff including a housekeeper, nanny, gardener and window cleaner when staying in the UK. Prosecutors say she stayed in properties including a ‘grand’ home in Buckinghamshire, a £2.8million home in Marylebone, central London, and multimillion pound homes overlooking Regent’s Park, and allegedly benefited from renovations valued at £4.6million. Those accused of bribing Alison-Madueke are also accused of bankrolling lavish shopping sprees at high-end retailers, with bills of more than £2million at Harrods, £370,740 at Marylebone antiques dealer Vincenzo Caffarella, and £117,224.33 with Mayfair retailer of fine china, silverware and glass, Thomas Goode. Alison-Madueke denies five counts of accepting bribes and a charge of conspiracy to commit bribery. Olatimbo Ayinde, 54, an owner of Nigerian oil companies, denies two charges of bribery, while Alison-Madueke’s brother, former archbishop Doye Agama, 69, denies conspiracy to commit bribery. Today, prosecutor Alexandra Healy KC told jurors at Southwark Crown Court that Alison-Madueke’s visits to Thomas Goode, starting in February 2011, ‘made an impression’ as she was accompanied by an entourage. One of the workers, Jon Taverner, recalls shopping sprees lasting for hours, the court heard, including one occasion when she ‘sat at a desk in the store to do a couple of hours work before doing some more shopping’. ‘He described her as particularly loving their sales, and could not resist a bargain,’ said Ms Healy. ‘On one occasion he recalled her saying words to the effect ‘I don’t even know why I’m buying this, I haven’t got the room for it’.’ Jurors were told that Alison-Madueke ‘never paid’ for purchases at the Mayfair store, which included £19,533 on a marble console table, a Georgian-style sideboard and a French writing desk. The court heard Mr Taverner later identified some of the items bought from his store, that were recovered by the National Crime Agency from a storage unit which is said to be linked to Alison-Madueke. When she was part of the Nigerian government, Alison-Madueke had oversight of the state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation and its subsidiaries the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company and the Pipelines Product Marketing Company. It is alleged she accepted bribes from five men with leading roles in oil companies which were seeking access to government contracts. One of the men, Kolawole Aluko, is said to have been behind ‘excessive and extravagant’ spending for Alison-Madueke, including the Harrods shopping sprees. Jurors heard he paid for items allegedly selected by Alison-Madueke at high-end retailer West One Bathrooms in 2013, for the refurbishment of a master bathroom and guest cloakroom. But the items, costing more than £38,000 were never collected. In 2014, Ms Healy said Alison-Madueke was concerned that Mr Aluko had been talking about their alleged arrangement, and showed jurors extracts of recorded conversations. In one, she said: ‘I will be happy to escort all of you to jail along with myself’. ‘I will come out and tell the Nigerian people this is what happened,’ she continued. ‘Oh yes, I will blame myself…but I will come out openly and say it so that they can judge me openly.’ In the conversations, Mr Aluko is heard denying naming Alison-Madueke to anybody, and she challenges the idea that 80 million dollars had been spent on her, adding: ‘The furniture they gave me didn’t come to more than four million dollars altogether.’ Ms Healy told the court: ‘It is a clear reference to issue with whether Mr Aluko was telling people he had given her gifts. Alison-Madueke is saying it wasn’t 80 million, it was four million in furniture.’ The trial is expected to hear allegations of £1 million in payments to Agama’s church, which were also said to be aimed at influencing Alison-Madueke. The trial continues.

Read More