 The House of Representatives has urged the Central Criminal Court of the United Kingdom and the British government to temper justice with mercy in sentencing a former Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Ike Kuremadu, his wife, Beatrice Kuremadu, and a U.K.-based doctor, Obinna Obita. The House also urged the federal government of Nigeria to take all diplomatic steps and other necessary interventions regarding the travails of the Kuremadu family. The call for clemency by the House was sequeled to the unanimous adoption of a motion of urgent public importance by the Deputy Minority Leader, Tobi Okechuku, titled Motion on the Need for Clemency for Senator Ike Kuremadu. The Speaker of the House, Femi Wajabiamila, in his remarks urged the court to consider the novel acts of Ike Kuremadu's life and judge him on the totality of that life rather than solely on his last worst act. Meanwhile, the Speaker of the Parliament of the Economic Community of West African States, Dr. C.D. Tunis, has also pleaded that the U.K. court tempers justice with mercy in sentencing the Kuremadus. Break the full weight of this parliament, formally, informally, and ask the British government to remember, and the Justice Department to remember the long-term relations we've had with them. I'm going to use the opportunity to speak directly to the Crown and the British courts and judicial system, nor to the bid to absolve our former Senate President for any offenses he may have committed, but to plead for clemency.