Former Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, his wife Beatrice and Doctor Obinna Obeta have been sentenced to 10 years imprisonment each over organ harvesting.
A judge at The Old Bailey has sentenced former Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, his wife Beatrice and doctor Obinna Odeta to jail.
At a sentencing hearing on Friday, Ekweremadu was jailed for nine years and eight months, his wife Beatrice was sentenced to four years and six months imprisonment while Obeta received a 10 year prison term.
Ike and Beatrice Ekweremadu along with their 25-year-old daughter Sonia faced trial at the Old Bailey.
In a televised sentencing on Friday, Mr. Justice Johnson recognised Ike Ekweremadu’s “substantial fall from grace”.
The senior judge 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.”
He added the risks had not been properly explained and there had been no consent “in any meaningful sense”.
Previously the court heard Nigerian senator Ike, 60, his wife Beatrice, 56, were accused of conspiring to traffic a young man to Britain for his body parts.
The Ekweremadus’ faced the accusations along with medical “middleman” Dr. Obinna Obeta, 50, who was also found guilty and were said to have created an “elaborate” back story to try and get away with it, utilising their connections to get the donor a visa.
Daughter Sonia wept back in March as she was cleared of the same charges after the jury deliberated for nearly 14 hours.
The court heard that the 21-year-old street trader from Lagos was to be rewarded for donating a kidney to Sonia in an £80,000 private procedure at the Royal free Hospital in London.
But he was later rejected as unsuitable, despite the extensive efforts the family were said to have gone to get him and it was alleged that the Ekweremadus then changed their donour search to Turkey after doctors refused them.
While it is lawful for someone to donate a kidney, it is criminal to reward someone for doing so, jurors heard.
When asked why they didn’t go to a member of their own family for the kidney, the prosecution said it was because the wealthy couple wanted the “risk to go to someone you don’t know”.
An investigation was launched after the young man ran away from London and slept rough for days before walking into a police station more than 20 miles away Staines in Surrey, crying and in distress.
The Ekweremadus, who have an address in Willesden Green, north-west London, and Dr. Obeta, from Southwark, south London, denied the charges against them before being found guilty.
During the trial, prosecutor Hugh Davies KC, told jurors: “Most parents, whether powerful or not in society, will do whatever is necessary to alleviate suffering in their child.
“The Ekweremadus were no different: the evidence – from downloads from their mobile phones, and wider actions – demonstrates a close, open and loving family each with an understandable and direct interest in Sonia’s medical treatment.”
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.
“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.
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.
“Although organ harvesting forms a very small percentage of modern slavery, human trafficking, we’re now starting to see more people coming forward.