A trained doctor and his wife, a nurse at Ealing Hospital, have been
given six-year sentences after they kept a man as a slave in their west
London home.
Emmanuel and Antan Edet were both found guilty of ill-treating a
young person, holding him in servitude and assisting unlawful
immigration.
Ofonime Sunday Inuk, now aged 40, worked up to 17 hours a day unpaid. He cared for the couple's children, and also cooked and cleaned the house.
He was about 14 years old in 1989 when he left his native Nigeria
with Emmanuel Edet, now 61, and his wife Antan, 58. They changed Mr
Inuk's name and added him to their family passport when they first
brought him to the UK.
He believed he would be working as a paid 'houseboy' and receive education in the UK.
But
the couple, whom he referred to as 'Sir' and 'Ma' in diaries, gave him
only occasional 'pocket money' and forced him to eat his meals alone and
sleep on the hallway floor of the house in Perivale.
Judge Arran told the Edets: "The most serious aspect of your behaviour
towards him was that it went on for an exceptionally long period of
time, robbing him of the opportunity of leading a normal life.
Emmanuel Edet worked for Surrey County Council as a manager in the
teenage pregnancy strategy team, and was the author of published papers
on the subject while his wife was a senior nurse at Ealing Hospital.
They each served 287 days on bail with curfew conditions, and half that time will be subtracted from their six-year sentences.
BBC News

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