Fela. John Collins
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I had gone there to collect money to repair my conga drum. The police first sent two officers inside the house and told Fela they were coming to search for Indian hemp and the two missing girls. Fela told them that before you come into my house I will first search you as you may be coming in with drugs to put in my house to put me into trouble. So Fela searched the two officers up and down and found a talisman in one of the policeman’s pockets.
Fela asked him what he is doing with a talisman and the officer said we use it for protection. So after a long argument Fela said you can all come in—by which time everything had been put in order and the two girls had gone through the back door and jumped the fence. So the police couldn’t catch either of them but rather arrested we who had come innocently, and the musicians and girl dancers living there—fifty-two of us in all—and took us to CID headquarters at Alagbon Close.
They also arrested Fela, saying that he was smoking Indian hemp and took him to a cell at Alagbon Close where they keep all the political detainees, eminent personalities, veteran soldiers, and military officers who had been arrested during the [Biafran] civil war. This area of the prison is called “XX Timbuctu” and has only one door and no proper windows. So the moment Fela entered, these people shouted: “Fela, Fela you are going to be our president in this prison.” That is how his name the Black President started. And the actual corner of this large cell where they put Fela is called Kalakuta.
You were also arrested. So what happened then?
We fifty-two were in the cells for a week and the torture and beatings in prison were too much. As I’m talking to you now I have weak teeth. Hitting me with gun, kicking me with boot, calling me a Ghanaian. Fela’s mother bailed Fela, and Beko [his brother] bailed Fela’s girlfriend, but as a Ghanaian I didn’t have anyone to bail me. However, later on one of the gatemen of the Shrine told the court clerk that that man you want to take to Ikoyi Prison is my in-law. So he bailed me too and we all started going to Court Two at Bode Thomas in Surulere for four months. Then they changed the judge and took me, Fela, and the others to another court in Apapa.
I made the mistake of telling the court that my father was a Ghanaian policeman, thinking I would be let free as a policeman’s son. Not knowing it was worsening things as the CID was saying I had three charges against me. That I was a Ghanaian who was bringing Ghanaian girls to Fela, that I had originally come into the country illegally, and that I had a false Nigerian passport. But it wasn’t true, as I had first come to Ghana on a band group-passport. Fortunately the two CID men who went to Ghana to investigate about me at police headquarters in Accra couldn’t get documented evidence on my father, as he had retired as a pensioner and couldn’t be located. So I was saved, as during the fourth month of the case, when the court was charged, the new judge couldn’t find my file. “Feelings Lawyer” [Wole Kuboye—one of Fela’s lawyers] said as there is no evidence that this man is a Ghanaian, he’s a Nigerian.
So I was discharged and acquitted, and when I jumped and shouted the judge said, “contempt of court.” So “People’s Lawyer” (another of Fela’s lawyers) told me to keep quiet while the judge read the acquittal verdict again. When I got outside Fela and the others were waiting and I shouted “Fela, Fela I’m free” and did somersaults and rolled on the ground. Fela said: “Yes, you are the first to win and now all of us are going to win our cases.”
What happened after your release?
I went on tour with Fela [then still out on bail] to Ilorin University in Kwara State and the police came and found Indian hemp in one of the saxophones as we were coming home. Then when we got back the police started looking for Fela, still in connection with the two girls. The band also went to Cameroons around this time and was also chased there by the Nigerian police.
Were you arrested during the second attack on his house that year in November 1974?
I had gone to the Ghana High Commission that day to a friend working there who normally gives us Ghanaian kenkey [fermented corn dough] and I was teargassed near the Shrine [by then the Empire Hotel] near Fela’s house [by then called Kalakuta]. I dropped the kenkey but wasn’t arrested. The police, however, did arrest two other Ghanaians—the conga player Nicholas Addo and my junior brother who was driving Fela’s mother’s car, called Aryee. After that Fela started dodging in hotels and so we were not playing for some time as Fela was being charged again with abducting girls.
We musicians were feeling hungry. I didn’t want to leave him as I loved him and his music but in early 1975 I joined a new juju-music group called the Juju Rock Stars and became a session musician at the EMI studio in Apapa. After that I joined Sonny Okosun’s band and featured in his Papa’s Land album. Then I was recruited to the University of Lagos cultural group by Igo Chico [a former saxophone player of Fela’s] and we played at the 1977 FESTAC black arts festival. I then met the university musicologist Joy Nwosu and worked with the Lagos University Cultural Centre Performing arts group until I recently retired.
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