Warning over rise in multimillion-pound modern slavery
.More cases of organ harvesting are under investigation.
The British public has been urged to be āvigilantā amid a sharp rise in modern slavery and more cases of organ harvesting under investigation.
Detective Superintendent Andy Furphy, the Metās modern slavery and child exploitation lead, issued the warning after the first successful prosecution for trafficking a victim to the UK for his body part.
Wealthy Nigerian politician Ike Ekweremadu, his wife Beatrice and medical middleman Obinna Obeta were each jailed for their attempt to procure a poor street trader from Lagos for a kidney transplant for the coupleās daughter Sonia.
Despite being turned down as a donor by the Royal Free Hospital in London, the crime only came to light when the 21-year-old victim ran away and walked into Staines Police Station.
On Friday, Ike Ekweremadu was jailed for nine years and eight months; Beatrice Ekweremadu for four years and six months; and Obeta for 10 years in a televised sentencing at the Old Bailey.
Afterwards, Mr Furphy said criminal exploitation of adults had soared by 30% in the last 12 months.
Sexual exploitation of female victims increased by around 24% and domestic servitude rose by 12% in the same period.
The senior officer said: āThe trajectory of modern slavery crimes shows very little signs of slowing down.ā
āThey are making millions and millions and millions a year, every year, most of which is transported to other parts of Europe and further afield.
āItās in our communities, itās in the services that we use.
āItās in the industry that builds road networks, buildings, or houses.
āItās in the beauty industry.
āItās in the sex industry.
āMy advice is to be vigilant, to report even if itās just a suspicion that you think somethingās not quite right.
āDonāt think a tiny bit of information or intelligence is insignificant, you never know that might just break the back of an organized crime group that are exploiting people.ā
āWe use all methods available to us to protect the vulnerable and reduce the harm in Londonās communities.
āAt all times we put the victim first. Theyāre often very scared, abused, malnourished, wary of authorities due to the extreme nature of their ordeal.
āThe victim in this particular case was vulnerable, given his economic circumstances, aggravated further by significant wealth and political influence of those who have now been convicted.
āIt sounds like something from fiction, from a book or a movie.
āWell, let me tell you: the abuse of power and wealth by these people over a vulnerable young man, itās astonishing.ā
Bringing the first successful prosecution was his āproudestā moment.
Paying tribute to the young victim, he said: āHis bravery has given strength to others.
āAnd now this is not the only case of organ harvesting under investigation.ā
Detective Sergeant Andy Owen described how the victim had turned up at the police station with only a mobile phone with no sim card, a toothbrush and scant clothes.
Over eight hours of interviews, he gave an account of how he was picked up in Lagos while selling phone accessorises from a wheelbarrow and brought to the UK.
He fled in fear for his life after over-hearing a plan to take him back to Nigeria for the procedure after the transplant plan in London failed.
Further inquiries led to Ike Ekweremadu, Nigeriaās deputy Senate president, as āsponsorā for the young manās travel.
Fearing that the Ekweremadus may never return to the UK, investigators prepared to wait years until they learned the couple were on a flight to Heathrow on June 21 last year.
The team was scrambled and the Ekweremadus were detained as they stepped off the plane with 30,000 US dollars and Naira, Mr Owen said.
They went on to arrest Sonia Ekweremadu, who was educated in the UK, and identified Obetaās address on the Old Kent Road in south London from the victimās phone.
A search of Obetaās home uncovered the victimās birth certificate and a fake High Court affidavit stating the victim and Sonia were biological cousins.
Detective Inspector Esther Richardson said it was a challenge preparing for trial with no case law to work with.
She said: āThis crime type sees rich and powerful people looking to exploit for vulnerable people for their organs.
āAnd we suspect that this happens across the world.
āOur victim was a commodity.
āAnd this was a transactional process, just like any drugs or firearms deal.
āThis type of crime is facilitated by organised criminal networks.
āThe tragedy of this is that it appeared that the welfare and well-being of the victim was of little or no consequence to Sonia getting a kidney.
āThere was no evidence of any care plan for the victim.ā
She added: āThe victim himself showed tremendous courage to come forward and to give evidence against powerful people.
āHeās an innocent, young and naive man.
āHaving never been on a flight, he was petrified that the plane would fall from the sky.
āWhen he fled Obinna Obetaās flat in London, he slept on the streets, fearing that snakes might bite him.
āOur victim is very fearful for his safety, and that of his family back in Nigeria.
āHe has no-one in the UK, no family, no friends, and heās having to start to rebuild his life from scratch.ā
He is one of hundreds of modern slavery victims to be helped by a ānavigatorā through the Justice and Care Programme.
With navigator support, 90% of victims choose to and remain engaged with police investigations compared to just 44% without.
Programme co-ordinator Julie Currie explained: āThey will have been told by their exploiters that they will not be believed, that they should fear the police and authorities or that their families will be harmed if they speak to police.
āAll of these things are barriers to a victim speaking out.
āAnd it is the job of the navigator with the police to help break down those barriers and build up the confidence that any victim is going to need to go through the judicial process.ā