Another Nigeria to UK Baby Smuggling Case
This case sounds almost identical to the Wednesday Weirdness case from October 2012 , except that this couple had to leave the child in Nigeria and were not granted custody as in our previously-reported case.
“An academic and his wife have both been sentenced for trying to smuggle a baby into the country, it was revealed today.
Dr Simon Heap and his wife Gladys Effa-Heap, a nurse, flew out to Nigeria and tried to dupe officials into believing a baby girl they wanted to bring back to the UK was theirs.
However, the Oxford pair were actually trying to illegally adopt the baby. [Not really. It was much worse. The claim was that this was their biological child.]
Dr Heap, a 47-year-old expert on Nigeria who works with companies trying to forge international trade links, and his 52-year-old partner claimed she had given birth just days after landing in the African country.
The ruse included producing a birth certificate which suspicious British High Commission staff examined and found to be fake.
Officials requested DNA testing of the baby girl and the couple which proved she was not biologically theirs.
The pair then left the baby in Nigeria and flew back to the UK, sparking an investigation into the baby smuggling.
Today the couple were convicted of breaching immigration law and handed 12 month prison sentences, suspended for 12 months.
They were also ordered to complete 250 hours of community service each by a judge at Isleworth Crown Court after admitting the offence, which took place in July 2010.
A spokesman for the Border Force said: ‘A couple from Oxford have been convicted of attempting to pass off a Nigerian baby as their own so they could bring it back to the UK, following a joint Border Force and Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) investigation.
‘They later went to the British High Commission in Lagos where they applied for a British passport for the baby girl, claiming Mrs Effa-Heap had given birth within days of them arriving in Nigeria.
‘However, staff became suspicious and DNA tests later confirmed that neither adult was related to the child. A birth certificate they had presented was also found to be fraudulent. They flew home without the baby.’
Following an investigation, officers from Operation Paladin, a specialist Border Force and MPS team tasked with safeguarding children, they were arrested and charged with facilitating a breach of immigration law.
Marc Owen, head of Border Force at Heathrow, said: ‘This was a shocking case where a couple attempted to pass someone else’s baby off as their own in an attempt to bring it to the UK.
‘Thanks to the close co-operation between Border Force, the Metropolitan Police and staff at the British High Commission they were stopped and we were able to bring them to justice.’
Detective Inspector Kate Bridger, who leads the Paladin team, said: ‘A child should not be treated as a commodity to be bought and sold.
‘This couple attempted to circumvent the adoption system and deceive the authorities.
‘That system is in place to protect children and we will do all we can to bring to justice those who try and get round it in this kind of way.’
Dr Heap was awarded the first Britain – Nigeria Educational Trust Commonwealth Fellowship at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria.
The Cambridge University graduate has also held the post of Global Research Portfolio Coordinator at Plan International, an NGO working to improve the lives of children in 66 countries around the world.
He was also awarded the Kirk-Greene Junior Research Fellow in Tropical African Studies at St Antony’s College, Oxford, and now works at forging trade relations between Nigeria and Japan.
His wife is a registered and published nurse who has specialist interests in HIV and AIDS, blood transfusions and teenager pregnancy and sexual behaviour.”
[Daily Mail 4/18/13 by Sam Webb]
“Heap, of Waynflete Road, was a published researcher and has been director of Barton Community Association since 2004.
The academic and his wife flew out to Nigeria in July 2010. During a visit to the British High Commission in Lagos, they tried to register a baby for a British passport in Nigeria so they could bring her back to the UK.
They claimed Mrs Effa-Heap had given birth to her within days of their arrival in the country.
But officials became suspicious and DNA tests on the girl followed. The couple also had a fraudulent birth certificate for her.
They were arrested following a joint investigation by Border Force and the Metropolitan Police.
Speaking after the hearing, Detective Inspector Kate Bridger, who leads the specialist team, said: “A child should not be treated as a commodity to be bought and sold.
“This couple attempted to circumvent the adoption system and deceive the authorities.
“That system is in place to protect children and we will do all we can to bring to justice those who try to get round it in this kind of way.”
A Home Office spokesman said the child had remained in Nigeria.
Oxford residents who knew the couple said they were shocked by the conviction.”
Oxford couple tried to smuggle baby into UK from Nigeria
[This is Oxfordshire 4/19/13 by Katriona Ormiston and Tom Jennings ]
This trafficking happened in 2010, yet the NGO Japan International Cooperation Agency-UK (JICA) hired him in March 2012 . See here. They must be so proud.
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