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Mother accused of murdering son says he was oxygen-starved during birth

Christina Robinson denies murdering her son Dwelaniyah at the family home in Durham in November 2022.

Tom Wilkinson
Monday 18 March 2024 08:25 EDT
Dwelaniyah Robinson, three, whose mother Christina denies his murder (Durham Police/PA)
Dwelaniyah Robinson, three, whose mother Christina denies his murder (Durham Police/PA) (PA Media)

A mother accused of murdering her three-year-old son has told a jury he was starved of oxygen during his birth.

Christina Robinson, 30, is on trial for murdering her son, Dwelaniyah, at the family home in Bracken Court, Ushaw Moor, Durham, in November 2022.

She denies losing her temper and violently shaking the boy on the day he collapsed, never to recover, as well as a series of child cruelty offences said to have happened in the weeks before he died.

The jury at Newcastle Crown Court has been told they can consider an alternative manslaughter charge, plus four child cruelty charges, all of which she denies.

The prosecution said she deliberately burned him by immersing him in hot water; that she used slaps, or the back of her hand, hit him with a bamboo cane, spoons and other implements; that she failed to get him medical treatment; and that she abandoned him by leaving him alone at home.

Robinson gave additional evidence from the witness box on Monday, having parted company with her legal team of barristers and a solicitor last week.

On the day he died, Robinson told the emergency services that her son collapsed while eating.

She told jurors about ā€œcomplications Dwelaniyah had at birthā€.

The defendant said: ā€œHe did get stuck on the way out, which I did need assistance for, and he was starved of oxygen for a while.

ā€œHis eye was bulged and blood-shot.

ā€œIā€™m not saying that this could have led to what had happened but because no checks were done, we donā€™t know if there was any damage.ā€

She said her son bumped into things and banged his head and that he had appointments with eye specialists.

ā€œWe cannot say either way what effect it could have had over time, whether he was higher risk of having something happen,ā€ she said.

Mr Justice Garnham, setting out the legal directions to the jury, told them they must not allow themselves to be influenced by the ā€œstrong emotionsā€ the case will cause.

He said: ā€œYou must not judge this case on the basis of feelings or sympathy or any emotional reaction you may have.ā€

Robinson, who is originally from Tamworth, Staffordshire, is a follower of the Black Hebrew Israelites religion, and told the jury that prior to his death, she hit him with a bamboo garden cane as a ā€œcorrectionā€ for playing with his food.

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