Mother ‘paid man £1,000 to pose as her baby’s father in bid to dodge deportation.’
A Nigerian mother who paid a man £1,000 to pose as her newborn baby’s father in a bid to dodge deportation was caught out by online pictures of the real dad cradling his son at a naming ceremony, a court heard.
Faust Abolore, 29, allegedly hired Anthony Ezekpo, 44, in a plot to gain British citizenship, using his name on the baby’s birth certificate and a subsequent passport application.
She claimed they lived together at a bogus address in Chandlers Drive in Erith in an attempt to fool Greenwich council officials.
But Inner London crown court heard the baby’s real father, Nigerian national Peter Gentry, was photographed at the naming ceremony, on September 15, 2014, in the role of the doting dad.
Ezekpo actually lives on the outskirts of Newcastle, and Abolore wired £1,000 to his bank account the day the birth certificate was signed, jurors heard.
“He was enlisted as part of a fraudulent scheme to get British citizenship for her to remain in the UK,” said prosecutor Adam Gardner.
“A man turned up with her at council offices in Greenwich to register the birth and get a birth certificate.
The man putting himself forward as the father was not Mr Gentry but Mr Ezekpo, and they both said they lived together.”
Abolore gave birth to her son at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Woolwich on August 6, 2014, and a photo on her phone shows Mr Gentry cradling the newborn child.
They were living together in Columbus Square, Erith, having entered the UK illegally, the court heard, and Abolore was facing deportation.
Once she had the birth certificate with Ezekpo’s name on it, she submitted a passport application signed by Ezekpo and counter-signed by Samson Awoyinka, 29, it is alleged.
“Mr Awoyinka said he knew Mr Ezekpo for five years from his church congregation,” said Mr Gardner.
“This was not true, he barely knew the man.
He then admitted he signed the passport application and went to Greenwich.”
Abolore, who was arrested in September last year, refused to consent to a paternity test.
“She had a great deal to hide,” said the prosecutor.“She knew if she gave consent to the DNA test it would reveal the truth that Mr Ezekpo was not the father and her application for a passport and birth certificate were all lies.”
Abolore, of Colombus Square, Erith, and Ezekpo, of Litchfield Street, Winlaton, Gateshead, deny conspiracy to breach immigration law and giving false information when registering a birth.
Abolore also denies seeking leave to remain in the UK by deception.
Awoyinka, of Havil Street, Southwark, denies making a false statement.
Nearly 1,800 foreign criminals who are eligible for deportation have been living in Britain for more than five years, according to new figures.
l Some 5,895 foreign offenders are still living in the community after being released from prison, with many of them having stayed in the UK for many years.
Of the foreign criminals, 1,792 have still not been deported more than five years after they were released from prison, according to Home Office figures.
A further 344 criminals are still in the UK between four and five years after being released, and 466 are still in Britain between three and four years after getting out of jail.
Another 574 offenders have not been deported between two and three years after leaving prison, and 843 criminals are living in the community between one and two years after their release.
The figures, taken from March 2016, were revealed by the home office in a response to a parliamentary question asked by Labour MP Keith Vaz, chairman of the home affairs select committee.
Vaz said the figures showed there was something “seriously wrong” with the system and demanded “urgent action”. He said: “These are extraordinary figures. To have failed to deport nearly 1,800 people after five years shows that there is something seriously wrong with the system.
“It can’t be right that people who have been convicted of a criminal offence in this country have been allowed to stay for up to half-a-decade with apparently no prospect of removal.
“We need to take urgent action to ensure that when sentences have been completed people are returned to their countries of origin immediately.”
The numbers come amid concern that foreign criminals have used human rights legislation to avoid being kicked out of the country.
A number of offenders with British children have claimed they should not be deported because it would breach their rights to a family life.
The home office highlighted figures showing 5,692 foreign offenders were removed from the UK in the year 2015 to 16, the highest number since records began.
A spokesman said: “Any foreign national offender who poses a threat to the UK should be in no doubt of our determination to deport them.
“Those who are released by an immigration judge will be subject to stringent bail conditions, which can include tagging, while we continue to pursue their removal.
“We take our duty to protect the public very seriously and the recently introduced immigration act will mean that all foreign offenders who are subject to outstanding deportation proceedings will be electronically tagged.”

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