UK Court sentenced Ekweremadu to 9yrs, 8 months in prison
The Old Bailey Court in UK has sentenced the former Deputy President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, to 9 years and 8 months in Prison while his wife, Beatrice, is to serve 4 years and six months.
The Doctor and Medical Consultant, Dr Obinna Obeta was also sentenced to 10 years for his involvement in the attempted Organ Harvest.
Ekweremadu was jailed for plotting to traffic a young man to the UK to harvest his organ for their sick daughter in a legal first, according to Metro UK.
Following a landmark modern slavery case, multi-millionaire Senator Ike Ekweremadu, 60, his wife Beatrice, 56, and medical ‘middleman’ Dr Obinna Obeta, 51, were found guilty at the Old Bailey in March.
Their victim, a poor street trader in Lagos, was brought to the UK to provide a kidney for the Ekweremadus’ 25-year-old daughter Sonia.
He fled in fear of his life and walked into a police station exactly a year ago to report what had happened after the Royal Free Hospital called a halt on the private £80,000 procedure.
In a televised sentencing on Friday, Mr Justice Johnson said: ‘People-trafficking across international borders for the harvesting of human organs is a form of slavery.
‘It treats human beings and their body parts as commodities to be bought and sold.
‘It is a trade that preys on poverty, misery and desperation.”
He told the defendants: ‘You each played a part in that despicable trade.’
On the question of harm to the victim if the intended transplant went ahead, he said: ‘He would have faced spending the rest of his life with only one kidney and without the requisite funding for the required aftercare.’
He added the risks had not been properly explained and there had been no consent ‘in any meaningful sense’.
During the hearing, the victim, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, said he only found out what was planned when he was taken to the north London hospital for an initial consultation.
In a statement read to court: ‘I would never (have) agreed to any of this.
‘My body is not for sale.’
He spoke of his fears for his own safety and that of his family in Nigeria who had been visited and told to ‘drop’ the case.
He said: ‘I cannot think about going home to Nigeria.
‘These people are extremely powerful and I worry for my family.
‘Even though I live here in the UK at the moment I know I need to be careful too.
‘I have no-one here, no family, no friends.
‘I am having to start my life again.
‘I’m worried about my family in Nigeria but I have been told my dad had been visited and was told to drop the case in the UK.’
It is the first time anyone has been convicted under the Modern Slavery Act of an organ-harvesting conspiracy.
Scotland Yard declined to say whether more charges would be brought but said the investigation was ongoing.
Police have highlighted soaring numbers of modern slavery cases in recent years with a small number involving organ harvesting.