Daily Mail

Missing in UK, vicar jailed in India over sex assault on boy, 15

- By Christian Gysin

A CHURCH of England vicar given a three-year prison sentence for sexually assaulting a 15-year- old boy in India was missing last night.

The Reverend Jonathan Robinson – an acquaintan­ce of former Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams – was sentenced by a court in India earlier this month.

Robinson, 75, who was convicted of abusing the teenager after a seven-year police investigat­ion, had been released on bail pending a possible appeal.

But last night it emerged that he had failed to report to a police station on Tuesday and is now believed to have left India. The father of three is understood to have boarded an Etihad flight this week from Chennai to London.

Last night there was no sign of either Robinson or his wife Christine at their £400,000 home in Martock, Somerset, and the couple were thought to be in the Home Counties.

At one stage during lengthy court proceeding­s in India, a judge discussed whether the vicar might be castrated.

In the High Court in Chennai, formerly Madras, Mr Justice N Kirubakara­n said: ‘This court is sure that additional punishment of castration of child rapists would fetch magical results in preventing and containing child abuses.’ But he added that there would be a ‘hue and cry’ from human rights activists if castration was confirmed.

Another Indian court heard how Robinson molested his victim on two occasions in cheap YMCA hotels before attempting to have sex during attacks in April 2011. It happened when the pair were on an ‘educationa­l’ trip to the Indian capital, Delhi, involving a children’s home and charity.

The youngster had been taken from the home in Vallioor, in Tamil Nadu state, southern India, which was financed by the Grail Trust, where Robinson was a director at the time.

The teenager later alerted local welfare officials about his ordeal. They helped him file a criminal complaint to police and a warrant was issued for Robinson’s arrest. He initially denied the sex attacks took place. Under pressure he flew to India and handed himself into the authoritie­s in November 2015 after four years on Interpol’s wanted list.

At his trial in Vallioor, Robinson was convicted of attempting to commit unnatural sexual intercours­e and wrongful confinemen­t. He had quit his post as a director of the trust in the wake of the scandal.

Robinson has strong links to former Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Williams through their work with the Alister Hardy Trust, which promotes the study of religion.

Dr Williams has repeatedly refused to comment on their links. However, a blog for the vicar’s religious book – with the unfortunat­e title Crossing Boundaries – carries a recommenda­tion from Dr Williams. During a 40-year career Robinson held posts at churches in London, Surrey, Bath and Herefordsh­ire before retiring in 2001. He was allowed to return to duties in Hereford as a nonstipend­iary ‘priest in charge’.

Last year a Charity Commission inquiry into the Grail Trust and the charity’s Indian arm – formed to ‘advance religion, education and the relief of poverty’ – issued a damning indictment of those behind the body. Trustees told the commission that when allegation­s against Robinson were brought to their attention they did not report them to the commission because they thought they were ‘malicious and unsubstant­iated’.

But the inquiry found their ‘response to the allegation was inadequate’. The inquiry report concluded that there had been ‘misconduct and mismanagem­ent in the administra­tion of the charity’. In a statement this week the Grail Trust said: ‘We have consulted closely with the Charity Commission whose procedures and recommenda­tions we have followed.

‘Rev Robinson has played no part in the charity’s work since he resigned as director on January 2, 2012. We as a charity have completely distanced ourselves from him.’

 ??  ?? Convicted: Jonathan Robinson, right, with his lawyer Gregory Retnaraj
Convicted: Jonathan Robinson, right, with his lawyer Gregory Retnaraj

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