UK Refuses to Deport Former Nigerian Politician Convicted of Organ Trafficking
The UK government has turned down a request by Nigeria to extradite Ike Ekweremadu, a former deputy president of the Nigerian senate and ally of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, who is serving a nine-year-and-eight-month sentence for conspiring to exploit a man for his kidney.
Ekweremadu, 63, was found guilty in 2023 along with his wife Beatrice and co-conspirator Dr Obinna Obeta of trafficking a young man to London with the intention of harvesting his kidney. The kidneys were planned to be transplanted into Ekweremadu's daughter Sonia in a private unit of an NHS hospital.
Nigeria has been seeking Ekweremadu's extradition, but the UK government has rejected the request citing concerns that there are no guarantees he would serve out his sentence in Nigeria if deported.
A source at the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) confirmed that the UK will not tolerate modern slavery and any offender will face the full force of UK law. The decision comes amid criticism from Ekweremadu's home country, with many questioning why Abuja has not intervened to secure his release.
Ekweremadu's case has raised concerns about vulnerability and complacency in the UK health system towards organ trafficking. His trial exposed weaknesses in the system that allowed him to carry out the heinous crime.
In February 2022, Ekweremadu trafficked a young man to London with a false claim that the victim was his cousin and had agreed to a Β£80,000 kidney transplant. The plot was almost successful before it was foiled by hospital staff who rejected the transplant attempt. However, despite this, no action was taken against Obeta until he received a kidney transplant from another trafficked man in July 2021.
Ekweremadu's sentence represents "a very substantial fall from grace," according to Judge Jeremy Johnson, who described Ekweremadu as the driving force behind the organ-trafficking plot.
The UK government has turned down a request by Nigeria to extradite Ike Ekweremadu, a former deputy president of the Nigerian senate and ally of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, who is serving a nine-year-and-eight-month sentence for conspiring to exploit a man for his kidney.
Ekweremadu, 63, was found guilty in 2023 along with his wife Beatrice and co-conspirator Dr Obinna Obeta of trafficking a young man to London with the intention of harvesting his kidney. The kidneys were planned to be transplanted into Ekweremadu's daughter Sonia in a private unit of an NHS hospital.
Nigeria has been seeking Ekweremadu's extradition, but the UK government has rejected the request citing concerns that there are no guarantees he would serve out his sentence in Nigeria if deported.
A source at the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) confirmed that the UK will not tolerate modern slavery and any offender will face the full force of UK law. The decision comes amid criticism from Ekweremadu's home country, with many questioning why Abuja has not intervened to secure his release.
Ekweremadu's case has raised concerns about vulnerability and complacency in the UK health system towards organ trafficking. His trial exposed weaknesses in the system that allowed him to carry out the heinous crime.
In February 2022, Ekweremadu trafficked a young man to London with a false claim that the victim was his cousin and had agreed to a Β£80,000 kidney transplant. The plot was almost successful before it was foiled by hospital staff who rejected the transplant attempt. However, despite this, no action was taken against Obeta until he received a kidney transplant from another trafficked man in July 2021.
Ekweremadu's sentence represents "a very substantial fall from grace," according to Judge Jeremy Johnson, who described Ekweremadu as the driving force behind the organ-trafficking plot.