Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Couple Keeps Nigerian Teenage ‘House Boy’ as Slave for 24 Years in the UK

The heart of man is desperately wicked and this is a very clear example.
British citizens Dr. Emmanuel Edet, 61, and his wife, Antan Edet, 58, kept a Nigerian teenager as a slave for 24 years.
The Edets brought their victim in to the UK in 1989 as a 14 year old teenage boy from Nigeria. They falsified his name and brought him in as their son. They told him he would be their ‘house boy’ (domestic help) and they would pay for his education.

Instead, the couple made him do house and garden work for zero pay, sometimes up to 17 hours a day, for 24 years. They threatened him with deportation if he ever faltered from his duties.

Emmanuel is a phlebotomist, while the wife is a senior nursing sister. They might have been entrusted with people’s lives and care at work, but their home was one of horror as they watched their victim through CCTV and made him sleep on a dirty foam mattress in their hallway. They also seized his passport, so he had no way of leaving the country.

The man, in his late 30s, only became aware that what was happening was wrong after he watched a documentary on modern slavery. He secretly emailed charity ‘Hope for Justice’ that intervened. The victim was released last year and is living a completely different life in the UK – he has a job, a home and is also a student.

As of this week, the Edets have now been convicted of child cruelty, slavery and assisting in illegal immigration at Harrow Crown Court.

Detective Chief Inspector Phil Brewer, of the Metropolitan Police’s trafficking and kidnap unit, had this to say about the abuse, and urged other victims of modern slavery to come forward:

The Edets … controlled what he wore, what he did and how he spoke for the majority of his life.

When the victim left Nigeria, he was a young boy with aspirations but the Edets abused him until he became timid, nervous and obedient. They conditioned him to the degree that when we visited him at the Perivale address and tried to lead him into the living room to speak, he became visibly shaken at the thought of breaking the Edets’ rules about going into that room. It was only when he went into the kitchen that he was able to relax and speak openly to police.

While he will never fully overcome what happened during those 24 years, he is determined to make the most of the rest of his life and today’s conviction will help him feel he can do that. In his own words, he has hope and a future now.


Credit:BN

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