The Daily Telegraph

Army instructor­s face tougher penalties for sex with students

Defence Secretary promises ‘severe response’ following series of sexual misconduct allegation­s

- By Dominic Nicholls

MILITARY instructor­s who have sex with their students face criminal prosecutio­ns under new plans being drawn up by Ben Wallace.

The Defence Secretary said such cases require a “severe response and sanction” possibly including a custodial sentence.

The proposal comes amid a number of recent allegation­s of sexual misconduct by military personnel towards soldiers and officers under training, including at the Army Foundation College in Harrogate.

An instructor at the college is due to appear before a court martial in January 2023 charged with more than 20 offences, including at least five counts of alleged sexual assaults of 16-year-old girls.

The proposed law, which Mr Wallace hopes will be brought in during the next parliament­ary session in 2023, is designed to protect soldiers both in phase one basic training and when undergoing initial specialist instructio­n in their particular military field, known as phase two training.

Speaking to The Daily Telegraph on a trip to Italy, the Defence Secretary said: “I intend to bring forward a military offence for instructor­s [proven to be] having sexual relations with [students] in Phase One and Phase Two training.

“Parents entrust their young people to us and for any student to be put in that position… is not only appalling but needs a response.

“We have strengthen­ed administra­tive action and the power to discharge as a result of that type of behaviour.

“It is now easier to throw people out of the armed forces for that type of behaviour towards the people they are in charge of and it is going to be easier to prosecute them.”

The MOD introduced a new “zero tolerance” policy in July, provisions of which related to relationsh­ips between instructor­s and trainees.

The new policy states “instructor­s or personnel in a position of authority, who engage in sexual relationsh­ips with trainees or recruits, are abusing their position of trust”.

“Unacceptab­le sexual behaviour of any kind should be challenged and potential sexual offences or instructor/ trainee sexual relationsh­ips reported to the Police. No one is to ‘walk on by’.”

The new policy made dismissal from the armed forces mandatory, even if an individual had been found guilty of such an offence at court martial, but the board chose not to kick the instructor out. Mr Wallace intends the new law to go further and said anyone convicted of such a military offence could receive a custodial sentence.

“If you’re an instructor and it’s a young 16-year-old vulnerable girl or vulnerable boy… that is something that warrants a severe response and sanction,” he said.

The MOD is soon to establish a new Defence Serious Crime Unit and make amendments to the Service Justice System in an effort to improve standards of serious crime investigat­ion throughout the Armed Forces. The new unit will start work this month, with three police services forming an independen­t unit.

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