It is no longer news that a criminal court in London, on Monday, granted bail to Beatrice Ekweremadu, who is enmeshed in an alleged organ harvesting trial along with her husband, Ike Ekweremadu, a former Nigerian Deputy Senate President.
According to reports, the court, popularly known as Old Bailey, granted bail to Beatrice on stringent conditions but denied bail to her husband, Ike, who continues to be held in custody.
“The position is that I have granted bail to Beatrice subject to some fairly stringent conditions but I have refused bail to Ike,” Judge Richard Marks was quoted saying.
The import of this decision is that the former deputy senate president would continue to be held at HMP Wandsworth in south-west London, one of the UK’s most famous prisons, criticised after it was found inmates were living in “squalid” conditions and locked in their cells for up to 22 hours a day.

Freelanews Business Intelligence unit, a research arm of Freelanews, did some digging into the prison considering the VIP status of Ike in Nigeria, but the research threw up some shocking facts.
With more than 1,400 inmates, HMP Wandsworth is one of the largest and oldest in the UK, but is suffering from severe overcrowding and has regularly received poor ratings on previous inspections.
In the most recent inspections in 2018 and 2021 most scores given were two out of four and described as “not sufficiently good.”
The 2022 report praised improvements in managerial oversight, engagement with foreign prisoners, education and mental health support.
But they found violence had increased, overcrowding was still an issue, with many living in “very poor conditions” and access to mental health services, education, fitness and even the outside were inadequate.
The report said: “Prisoners were moved into dirty, graffiti-covered cells, some of which had no windows. Cleaning cupboards continued to be in disarray and there were large amounts of rubbish in exercise yards attracting vermin.”
The shower areas in some parts of the prison were described as “unacceptable.” (HM Chief Inspector of Prisons)
It singled out the mental health inpatient unit specifically, describing it as “unacceptable.”
Entire wings were criticised as being filthy and overcrowded, with many one-man cells split between two.
They said the shower areas in wings G, H and K were “squalid”.
They also said there was no plan to improve the situation.
The authors said more than half of the population were unemployed or not engaging with education meaning they spent 22 hours locked in their cell.
Some inmates were denied access to open air for days.
Despite praising the recent recruitment drive to fill out the mental health support roles in the prison the authors still heavily criticised the provisions.
Just four of the 12 mental health units were usable, with half being refurbished and the other two being damaged.
This meant patients often had to be treated on the wings and had to wait weeks to be provided with a special mental health cell.
The longest a patient had to wait was 226 days.
The report also said the support for prisoners after release was “very poor” with less than half of prisoners having a place to stay on the night of their release.
It also noted there were “very high rates of non-effective staff”, which had been a problem in previous inspections.
Some Nigerians believe his fate is so because karma always have a way of paying back. “In hindsight, maybe he would have pushed for more prison reforms and better living conditions of inmates in Nigerian prisons when he was in power,” one said.






Ojelabi, the publisher of Freelanews, is an award winning and professionally trained mass communicator, who writes ruthlessly about pop culture, religion, politics and entertainment.
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