Beatrice, the wife of Ike Ekweremadu, former deputy senate president, has been released from prison in the United Kingdom and has returned to Nigeria.
A family source told the BBC on Wednesday that Beatrice
returned to the country three months ago.
In March 2023, Ekweremadu, Beatrice, and Obinna Obeya, a medical doctor, were convicted of conspiring to traffic a young man for organ harvesting under the UK’s Modern Slavery Act of 2015.
The case marked the first conviction of its kind under the legislation.
On May 5, 2023, Ekweremadu was sentenced to nine years and
eight months in prison, his wife was sentenced to four years and six months,
and Obeta was handed a 10-year prison term.
In his judgment, Jeremy Johnson, the trial judge, ruled
Beatrice should spend half of the sentence in custody and on license for the
rest of the sentence.
Johnson also held that the period spent by Beatrice in
electronically monitored curfew and the remand duration should be considered
when calculating the time spent in prison.
The Ekweremadus were found guilty of arranging for a young
Nigerian man to travel to the UK in February 2022 with the intention of
harvesting his kidney for their ailing daughter, Sonia.
The young man, who was allegedly promised work in the UK, reported the matter to the police in May 2022, stating that he was brought to the country for an organ transplant.
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