Summary
The United Kingdom has turned down a request from the Nigerian government seeking permission for former Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu to complete his prison term in Nigeria.
Ekweremadu, who is currently held in a UK correctional facility, was convicted in 2023 for his involvement in a plot to harvest the kidney of a young man. His conviction stemmed from a widely publicized organ-trafficking case that generated significant global commentary.

Following his sentencing, the former senator received a term of nine years and eight months. During a recent diplomatic engagement, Nigeria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Yusuf Tuggar, led a delegation to the UK Ministry of Justice (MoJ) to discuss Ekweremadu’s situation.
At the meeting, Nigeria formally requested his transfer and deportation, proposing that he be allowed to serve the rest of his prison term in Nigeria.
However, according to reports from The Guardian UK, an MoJ official confirmed that the request had been declined. The publication noted that British authorities expressed concern over Nigeria’s inability to guarantee that Ekweremadu would continue serving his sentence if repatriated.
A source was quoted to have saying that “the UK will not tolerate modern slavery, and any offender will face the full force of UK law.”

This decision means Ekweremadu will remain in the United Kingdom to complete his full sentence without relocation.
In a related development, his wife, Beatrice Ekweremadu, who was handed a four-year-six-month sentence, with half spent in custody, was released earlier this year. She has since returned to Nigeria.
What You Should Know
Ike Ekweremadu, a former Deputy Senate President, is serving a UK prison sentence for his role in an organ-trafficking scheme that drew global attention.
Nigeria sought his return to serve the remainder of his sentence at home, but British authorities refused due to concerns about enforcement. His wife, also convicted, has already been released and repatriated.
























