Dubai Telegraph - Rape convict Robinho loses bid to delay Brazil jail time

EUR -
AED 3.890841
AFN 71.749675
ALL 98.148629
AMD 409.298146
ANG 1.899982
AOA 966.614534
ARS 1057.69071
AUD 1.626972
AWG 1.904101
AZN 1.80471
BAM 1.955791
BBD 2.12858
BDT 125.979429
BGN 1.954618
BHD 0.3993
BIF 3113.415288
BMD 1.059305
BND 1.417307
BOB 7.284967
BRL 6.088884
BSD 1.054185
BTN 88.957097
BWP 14.382799
BYN 3.449584
BYR 20762.381954
BZD 2.12498
CAD 1.485003
CDF 3040.205874
CHF 0.935642
CLF 0.037348
CLP 1030.545427
CNY 7.666726
CNH 7.66303
COP 4657.764972
CRC 536.897568
CUC 1.059305
CUP 28.071588
CVE 110.264501
CZK 25.2773
DJF 187.728264
DKK 7.459775
DOP 63.519712
DZD 141.434215
EGP 52.388255
ERN 15.889578
ETB 130.501909
FJD 2.402133
FKP 0.836128
GBP 0.835538
GEL 2.886604
GGP 0.836128
GHS 16.814924
GIP 0.836128
GMD 75.210376
GNF 9084.958848
GTQ 8.144963
GYD 220.559001
HKD 8.243359
HNL 26.629879
HRK 7.556298
HTG 138.489373
HUF 406.359853
IDR 16746.661864
ILS 3.954995
IMP 0.836128
INR 89.398738
IQD 1381.080707
IRR 44588.803307
ISK 144.499542
JEP 0.836128
JMD 167.320822
JOD 0.751155
JPY 163.210859
KES 136.788279
KGS 91.639576
KHR 4259.980704
KMF 492.311855
KPW 953.37428
KRW 1473.678884
KWD 0.325695
KYD 0.878488
KZT 526.017617
LAK 23160.895089
LBP 94406.572371
LKR 307.148609
LRD 193.449124
LSL 19.092814
LTL 3.127853
LVL 0.640763
LYD 5.148952
MAD 10.555352
MDL 19.155913
MGA 4927.931158
MKD 61.539826
MMK 3440.581974
MNT 3599.519019
MOP 8.452962
MRU 42.03281
MUR 49.252555
MVR 16.37726
MWK 1828.091719
MXN 21.407769
MYR 4.733507
MZN 67.716106
NAD 19.092814
NGN 1766.6986
NIO 38.799824
NOK 11.657919
NPR 142.331355
NZD 1.798664
OMR 0.407854
PAB 1.054195
PEN 4.007182
PGK 4.240981
PHP 62.151029
PKR 292.863109
PLN 4.321466
PYG 8216.923996
QAR 3.844783
RON 4.976511
RSD 116.983314
RUB 105.663248
RWF 1448.207111
SAR 3.976658
SBD 8.865876
SCR 14.723756
SDG 637.159357
SEK 11.563275
SGD 1.418457
SHP 0.836128
SLE 23.993433
SLL 22213.105444
SOS 602.502959
SRD 37.504706
STD 21925.478947
SVC 9.224871
SYP 2661.535948
SZL 19.085733
THB 36.671042
TJS 11.217049
TMT 3.707568
TND 3.332085
TOP 2.481002
TRY 36.651812
TTD 7.156968
TWD 34.362276
TZS 2811.376951
UAH 43.66069
UGX 3870.982466
USD 1.059305
UYU 45.209795
UZS 13506.938818
VES 48.444394
VND 26901.055598
VUV 125.762842
WST 2.957147
XAF 655.950933
XAG 0.033699
XAU 0.000404
XCD 2.862825
XDR 0.801989
XOF 655.947837
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.667734
ZAR 19.009618
ZMK 9535.007948
ZMW 29.070731
ZWL 341.095843
  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    6.93

    +1.15%

  • BCC

    1.4500

    141.54

    +1.02%

  • RIO

    1.1400

    62.12

    +1.84%

  • BTI

    0.2900

    36.68

    +0.79%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    24.39

    -0.21%

  • RELX

    0.5900

    45.04

    +1.31%

  • AZN

    0.1600

    63.39

    +0.25%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    13.23

    +0.98%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    62.9

    +0.24%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    8.92

    +1.68%

  • BCE

    0.4100

    27.23

    +1.51%

  • BP

    0.4400

    29.42

    +1.5%

  • RBGPF

    59.7500

    59.75

    +100%

  • GSK

    0.3400

    33.69

    +1.01%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    13.2

    -0.23%

  • CMSC

    0.0540

    24.624

    +0.22%

Rape convict Robinho loses bid to delay Brazil jail time
Rape convict Robinho loses bid to delay Brazil jail time / Photo: DOUGLAS MAGNO - AFP

Rape convict Robinho loses bid to delay Brazil jail time

Former Manchester City and Real Madrid footballer Robinho lost a last-minute court bid Thursday to delay serving his nine-year sentence in Brazil for raping a woman a decade ago.

Text size:

Supreme Court Judge Luiz Fux rejected Robinho's request for a stay and ruled "the detention order is maintained... so that he can begin serving his sentence."

Robson de Souza, popularly known as "Robinho," was found guilty by an Italian court in 2017 of taking part in the gang rape of an Albanian woman celebrating her 23rd birthday at a Milan nightclub four years earlier.

The former Brazil international, now 40, lost an appeal in 2020 and then had his sentence upheld by Italy's highest court in 2022, after which Italian prosecutors issued an international arrest warrant for him.

Brazil does not extradite its nationals, however, and Italy asked that Robinho be made to serve his sentence in his home country instead.

A court in Brasilia agreed Wednesday, by nine votes to two, and on Thursday, court president Maria Thereza de Assis Moura signed a document paving the way for a warrant to be issued for Robinho's incarceration.

His lawyers then filed a request to the Supreme Court for a "habeas corpus" ruling allowing him to remain a free man while challenging the latest court decision.

That has now been rejected.

- 'Brutally humiliated' -

The footballer, who protests his innocence, told Brazilian network TV Record in an interview broadcast Sunday the sex had been consensual and accused the Italian justice system of racism.

According to the complaint, Robinho and his co-accused had made the young woman drink "to the point of rendering her unconscious and unable to resist" and then had "sexual relations several times in a row" with her.

In March 2021, a Milan appeals court found Robinho had acted with "special contempt for the victim, who was brutally humiliated."

Robinho's case and that of former Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain defender Dani Alves have sparked criticism over the failure of football authorities in Brazil to condemn violence against women.

In February, former Brazil international fullback Alves, 40, was sentenced to four-and-a-half years in prison for raping a woman in a nightclub in Barcelona.

On Thursday, Palmeiras president Leila Pereira, the first woman at the head of the Brazilian club, lashed out at the football world for its silence on the twin rape convictions of Robinho and Alves.

"Nobody says anything," she told Brazil's UOL news site.

"It's a slap in the face for all of us women, especially the case of Daniel Alves, who paid for (his) freedom," Pereira said, referring to a Spanish court decision Wednesday to grant Alves bail of a million euros.

"Each case of impunity is the seed of the next crime," she added.

The father of another Brazilian football star, Neymar, on Thursday denied reports the family would pay Alves' bail.

- Fall from grace -

For Robinho, it has been a dramatic fall from grace.

Having begun his career in 2002 at Santos, a team made famous by Brazil great Pele, he was touted as the successor to the golden generation of Ronaldo, Rivaldo and Ronaldinho.

In 2005, he joined Zinedine Zidane, Ronaldo and David Beckham at Real Madrid.

He went on to play for Manchester City from 2008 to 2010, and for Milan for four years until 2014.

In 2009, he was briefly detained in England for an alleged sexual assault of a young woman, but the charges were dropped after an investigation.

He sought to return to Santos in 2020 but the club suspended the deal after pressure from fans and sponsors, leading to the abrupt end of his career.

At about the same time, TV channel Globo Sports had released excerpts of a recording Italian prosecutors used to secure their conviction, in which Robinho purportedly said: "I'm laughing because I don't care. The woman was completely drunk. She doesn't even know what happened."

Robinho has 100 Brazil caps and 28 goals for his country.

B.Gopalan--DT