UK Stay Permit: Police Foil Nigerian’s Attempt To Marry Lesbian

Dutch lesbian ‘bride’ Roqsilmar Marti, 28 (r), and Nigerian ‘groom’ Abraham Akinola, 32, were arrested at the altar after police leapt formt he vestry.

•Caught: Dutch lesbian ‘bride’ Roqsilmar Marti, 28 (r), and Nigerian ‘groom’ Abraham Akinola, 32, were arrested at the altar after police leapt formt he vestry.

An attempt by a Nigerian in the United Kingdom to marry a lesbian in order to live  and work in  the country has been foiled by the police.

•Caught: Dutch lesbian ‘bride’ Roqsilmar Marti, 28 (r), and Nigerian ‘groom’ Abraham Akinola, 32, were arrested at the altar after police leapt formt he vestry.

The Nigerian, Abraham Akinola, 32, with no right to live and claim benefits in  Britain, was arrested with his lesbian accomplice in a vestry moments before they  said their vows.

The lesbian, Roqsilmar Marti, 28 is from Holland.

According to the Daily mail of London, the vicar of the church where they were to be  joined as husband and wife reported them to the police after getting suspicious of  their intentions.

Police and Borders Agency staff hiding in the vestry leapt out and slapped them in  handcuffs after a tip-off by the priest, Father Tim Codling.

They  both pleaded guilty in Basildon crown court to conspiracy to commit an  immigration offence.

Marrying a citizen of not only Britain, but of any European Union country, gives a  non-EU national the right to live, work and claim benefits here.

Such sham marriages are a widespread problem, but Father Codling had become wise to  such antics at his Church of England church, St. John the Baptist in Tilbury, Essex.

And when the Dutch lesbian and the Nigerian man applied for their marriage banns on  June 6 for a church wedding in August, he realised the groom had given two different  homes addresses on official paperwork.

The authorities were duly informed and lay in wait as the bride and groom arrived  for the ceremony.

The court heard that Marti had been involved in a lesbian relationship for the past  eight years, and that her worried female partner had flown to the UK and reported  her missing on the day of the fake wedding.

Rotterdam resident, Marti, who speaks limited English, needed a translator in court.  Judge John Lodge remanded the pair in custody and asked for reports into their  background to be conducted so they could be sentenced at a later date.

A third man, Abdallah Magezi, 35, from Plumstead, south-east London, pleaded not  guilty to conspiring to hold the sham marriage and will go on trial next year.

Father Codling said the number of weddings he carried out in his church had tripled  following a government clampdown on bogus weddings at registrar offices – although  numbers noticeably dropped after the August arrests.

He began to suspect many of the weddings he carried out were bogus, but was legally  powerless to stop them.

Father Codling said fraudsters were targeting his church because of its growing  ethnic diversity and good train links with London making bogus marriage always easy.

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He said: “I think the vast majority of weddings we have at the church appear to be  sham marriages. But the way the legislation works means if someone has been given a  wedding licence I have to marry them.

“We can only stop weddings if we have reasonable grounds to suspect they aren’t  genuine.”

He said one suspect bride had stripped down to her underwear at the back of his  church, pulled a wedding dress out of a black bin back and put it on, even though it  was clearly twice her size.

He caught out another couple because when he asked the bride to repeat the vows, he  began reading out train station names and she repeated them back.

And another couple walked off in opposite directions when their wedding was  concluded.

Father Codling said: “I was asking the bride to repeat the vows and I just knew  something wasn’t right.

“So, I started calling out the names of stations on the London to Shoeburyness line  – Pitsea, Benfleet and Leigh-on-Sea, and the bride started saying them back to me.

“She clearly couldn’t understand anything I was saying. I don’t think she even knew  why she was in the church.”

Father Codling, 48, said that when he began questioning suspect weddings, his home  was broken into and his wife threatened.

Detective Sergeant Andy Harvey of Essex Police said after the arrests in August:  “Sham weddings are big business with the organisers charging £10,000 or more to  arrange ceremonies and to pay ‘brides’ and ‘witnesses.’

‘The UK Border Agency and Essex Police are working closely to crack down on the  criminals involved in these activities.”

Sam Bullimore of the Border Agency said: “Our immigration crime teams are cracking  down on sham marriages all over the country.

“If we uncover marriages that are not genuine, we will challenge them and prosecute  where appropriate. Our main aim is to identify the organisers who profit from and  fuel the demand for sham marriages, and destroy their criminal business.

“We do not expect vicars or registrars to be experts in immigration law or spotting  forged documents – that’s our job. But if they have any suspicions about whether a  relationship is genuine, we urge them to get in touch.”

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