A 22-year-old man who had claimed asylum in Ireland because he was gay, has been jailed raping a woman.
Kenneth Udeh (not pictured) was sentenced to five years in prison for attacking the
woman while she was on a night out in Waterford city centre. Originally from Nigeria, he pleaded guilty at the Central
Criminal Court in the city – for the incident that occurred in September
2014.
The court was told how the woman had met Udeh with a group of men smoking outside a pub in the early hours of the morning.
After a brief chat, she went to leave when Udeh offered her a ride home and the two walked to where he claimed his car was.
The woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, then said she was
pushed to the ground where Udeh dropped his trousers and raped her.
Shouting for help, a local man who was working late came to her help. He chased Udeh, but he managed to escape the man.
After being traced by the Garda (police), he initially denied sexual
contact, but changed his plea after his claim was contradicted by
forensic evidence.
Udeh, who first came to Ireland in 2009, had been refused asylum
twice and is in the process of appealing the second refusal.
When he initially came to the country, he claimed he was a Christian
living in a Muslim country and suffered persecution as a result.
After being returned, he came to Ireland again claiming he was homosexual.
In a report read to the court, the unnamed woman said she was “violated” and that she no longer wanted to live after the rape.
She added that it placed severe stress on her relationship and had
given a bad impression of all black men, who she now feared.
The woman said she didn’t believe that Udeh should be allowed to
remain in the country, but Mr Justice McCarthy said that was for the
courts to decide.
On sentencing Udeh, he said the attack had a serious effect on the
woman and backdated the five year sentence to reflect time he had
already spent in custody.
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