Alleged Organ Harvesting Saga: Senate Wades In, To Dispatch Delegation To London

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Nigerian upper chamber, the Senate is set to dispatch a delegation of its committee on foreign affairs to London to look into the allegation of organ harvesting levelled against the former Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu and his wife Beatrice.

The delegation is expected to leave for the United Kingdom in two days.

This development is coming barely 24 hours after the House Of Representatives disclosed that it will liaise with its UK counterpart to ensure that the Ekweremadus get justice while the Senate was called out for not saying anything since the news of the Ekweremadus arrest broke.

The Senate consequently mandated its committee on foreign affairs to engage with the British High Commission to “find more details on the case as far as the Commission is involved.”

Ahmad Lawan, the Senate President, made this known at the end of a closed-door session on Wednesday.

At the end of the executive session which lasted about an hour, Mr Lawan announced that the lawmakers were briefed on the arrest of their colleague, Mr Ekweremadu, in London.

He said he had a personal engagement with Nigerian High Commissioner to Britain “who has done so well to establish contact with Mr Ekweremadu – who has been able to get his team to be in the court in Uxbridge where he was taken to.”

The High Commission, he explained, has been able to provide some consular services that included the engagement of lawyers who will defend the Enugu senator.

The Senate President also said they “have limited opportunities to do beyond what has been done ” because the “issue is already in court.”

While he assured the family of Mr Ekweremadu that more will be done, he said a delegation will be sent to see the couple.

“There will be a delegation to London to see Senator Ekweremadu and his wife. The delegation on the senate committee on foreign affairs will leave in two days.

“We urge all institutions that can do anything to ensure that they do so, particularly the ministry of foreign affairs. And as for the Nigerian High Commission, we can ask for more but they have done us proud,” he said.

The couple were arrested last week by the London Metropolitan Police. They were charged with the alleged trafficking of one David Nwanini with the aim of harvesting his kidney.

The allegations were that Mr Ekweremadu and his wife brought a 15-year-old boy from Nigeria to the UK with the claim that he was to be given a better life in the UK but was actually to harvest his organ to treat their daughter who is suffering from kidney disease.

They were tried at the Uxbridge Magistrates’ Court in London and denied bail as the prosecutors reportedly informed the court that Mr Ekweremadu procured a passport for the boy and claimed he was 21 years old only to discover that he was 15 years old.

But the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS), has, however, said the age of the alleged victim of organ harvesting, David Nwamini, was 21; contradicting the claims of prosecutors in London.

Many Nigerians had condemned the Senate for its silence on the issue at yesterday’s plenary.

The House of Representatives invited the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama and the Director-General of the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC), Aliyu Aziz, to appear and brief relevant committees of the House on the ongoing trial in London of Mr Ekweremadu.

The Director-General of the Nigerian Immigration Services (NIS), Idris Jere, was also invited.

If convicted, the Ekweremadus may get a maximum of life sentence or 12 months imprisonment or a fine or both on summary conviction under the United Kingdom’s Modern Slavery Act 2015.

The Act read, “A person guilty of an offence under Section 1 or 2 is liable (a)on conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for life; (b)on summary conviction, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or a fine or both.”

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Unlocking Opportunities in the Gulf of Guinea during UNGA80
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