Ransome-Kuti returned to Nigeria in 1963 upon obtaining his degree. He was deeply affected by the events of 1977, when soldiers under the orders of
T. Y. Danjuma, then Chief of Army staff, stormed his brother
Fela Kuti's nightclub, destroyed his medical clinic and killed his mother. He became chairman of the
Lagos branch of the
Nigerian Medical Association and its national deputy, campaigning against the lack of drugs in hospitals. In 1984, Fela was arrested and sentenced to 10 years in prison by the government of General
Muhammadu Buhari. He was released in 1985 when Buhari was deposed by General
Ibrahim Babangida; Babangida then invited him to participate in the government. Ransome-Kuti helped to form Nigeria's first human rights organisation, the
Campaign for Democracy, which in 1993 opposed the dictatorship of General
Sani Abacha. In 1995, a military tribunal sentenced him to life in prison for bringing the mock trial of
Olusegun Obasanjo to the attention of the world. and freed in 1998 following the death of
Sani Abacha. Ransome-Kuti was a fellow of the West African College of Physicians and Surgeons, a leading figure in the British Commonwealth's human rights committee, chair of the Committee for the Defense of Human Rights and executive director of the Centre for Constitutional Governance. ==Death and legacy==