Robin Medforth-Mills Explained

Robin Medforth-Mills
Birth Name:Leslie Robin Medforth-Mills
Birth Date:8 December 1942
Birth Place:Sproatley, East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Death Place:Geneva, Switzerland
Father:Cyril Mills
Mother:Nora Medforth
Children:Nicholas de Roumanie-Medforth-Mills
Karina de Roumanie-Medforth-Mills

Leslie Robin Medforth-Mills (8 December 1942 – 2 February 2002) was a British professor of Geography at the University of Durham and a United Nations official.

Family

Medforth-Mills was the son of Cyril Mills (1908–1989) and Nora Medforth (1909–1990).[1]

He married Princess Elena of Romania at a civil ceremony on 20 July 1983 in Durham, England, which was followed by a religious ceremony on 24 September 1983 at the Greek Orthodox Church in Lausanne, Switzerland.

The family lived at Flass Hall, Esh Winning, Durham. The couple divorced on 28 November 1991 in Sutherland, Scotland, after having two children, Nicholas Michael de Roumanie Medforth-Mills (b. 1 April 1985), and Elisabeta Karina de Roumanie Medforth-Mills (b. 4 January 1989), whose godmother was the novelist Dame Catherine Cookson.

Education

Medforth-Mills was educated at South Holderness County Secondary School near Preston, in the East Riding of Yorkshire, where in 1960 he was Head Boy. He graduated from Durham University with a BA degree in Geography.[2] He subsequently obtained a PhD degree, and later became a professor of geography[3] at Durham.[4]

Career

He was a lecturer in Geography at Durham from 1974–1983 and subsequently a Research Fellow in the same subject from 1983–1990.[5] In addition to his Geography work in Durham, he also worked for the United Nations system,[6] serving as a UN expert in a manpower project implemented by the International Labour Organization in Sudan in the mid-1970s, in UNICEF in its fund-raising office in Geneva in the early 1990s, and later in its humanitarian operations in northern Iraq,[7] in the mid-1990s after the first Gulf War.

According to the security chief of the UNGCI, Poul Dahl, during that time Medforth-Mills was sexually harassing the male UN guards by offering them high-paying UN jobs in return for sex, and threatening them when they reported him.[8]

He was later posted with UNICEF again in Geneva, and also briefly in New York in the late 1990s. For several years after the fall of the Ceauşescu regime, he was involved in efforts to bring humanitarian aid to institutionalized orphans and other destitute people in Romania, and was a founder-member of the North-East Relief Fund for Romania,[9] set up with Princess Elena of Romania, and the then-Lord Mayor of Newcastle upon Tyne, Terry Cooney, and Harry Charrington.[10]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Elward . Ronald. Romania. Heirs of Europe. 8 November 2020. 6 June 2024.
  2. Web site: Newswire Back Number March 2002 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040828000508/http://www.dur.ac.uk:80/Alumni/pubs/newswire/backissues.php3?newsfile=march2002.html&title=March%202002 . dead . 28 August 2004 . Internet Archive Wayback Machine . Durham University . 18 September 2018 . 28 August 2004.
  3. "Romania’s exiled King longs to take his family home – after 42 years – and reclaim his throne", article by Mary H. J. Farrell and Ellen Wallace, in People Weekly, 12 February 1990
  4. "Right Royal Response", in Evening Chronicle, 22 February 1990
  5. Web site: Newswire Back Number March 2002 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040828000508/http://www.dur.ac.uk:80/Alumni/pubs/newswire/backissues.php3?newsfile=march2002.html&title=March%202002 . dead . 28 August 2004 . Internet Archive Wayback Machine . Durham University . 18 September 2018 . 28 August 2004.
  6. "Bags of help for mercy mission", article in The Journal, 22 February 1990 (mentions Medforth-Mills working for UN)
  7. http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/0/e9751eb31a890a05c125694c004ec27a?OpenDocument&Click= Reliefweb
  8. Poul Dahl, "Mission Irak",, (People's Press, 2007, 2nd edition, 1st printing), pages 241–246 (in Danish)
  9. "Northern firms urged to back Romanian relief", article by Andrew Smith, in The Journal, Tuesday, 27 February 1990
  10. "Princess pleads for aid to Romania", article in the Northern Echo, 27 February 1990