The ordeals of Nigeria’s former Deputy Senate President, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, over trial for an organ-trafficking plot in the United Kingdom have climaxed as the ex-lawmaker was on Friday convicted for the offence.
Ekweremadu, his wife, Beatrice, and their “middleman” were jailed for an organ trafficking scheme, after bringing an “uninformed” organ donor to the UK from Lagos for their 25-year-old daughter, Sonia.
According to the prosecutor, Hugh Davies KC, the Ekweremadus, and Obeta treated the donor like “disposable assets – spare components for reward.”
He was described by the judge as the “driving force throughout”, and sentenced to nine years and eight months in prison. The court also sentenced his wife, Beatrice, to four years, six months.
The middleman, Dr. Obeta was sentenced to 10 years after the judge found he had targeted the potential donor who was young, poor, and vulnerable.
Ekweremadu was born in 1962 at Amachara Mpu in Aninri Local Government Area of Enugu State, and is of Igbo origin. He was appointed the Executive Chairman of the council on the platform of the United Nigeria Congress Party (UNCP) in 1997.
He proceeded to become a ranking lawmaker in Nigeria where he was elected as senator representing the Enugu West senatorial district For the Fifth Consecutive time. He held different leadership positions in the Senate, first as Vice Chairman of the senate committee on Information, and as Deputy Senate President in the Sixth, seventh, and Eight Assemblies.
Over 12,000 unlawful transplants are thought to produce nearly 1.5 billion dollars annually from the illegal trade in human organs.
Ekweremadu’s conviction is said to be the first verdict of its kind under the Modern Slavery Act.