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Trojan Horse letter 'used to target Muslim schools', axed governor claims | |
(about 4 hours later) | |
The axed governor of a failing school has accused Birmingham City Council of using the "Trojan Horse" scandal to target Muslim schools. | |
Waseem Yaqub said the investigation into a letter outlining an alleged Islamist takeover plot of city schools was "a McCarthy-style witch-hunt". | |
Mr Yaqub, former chair of governors at Bordesley Green's Al-Hijrah School, said the authority was "anti-Muslim". | |
The council said Ofsted inspectors had found "serious failings" at Al-Hijrah. | |
'Muslims as scapegoats' | 'Muslims as scapegoats' |
Al-Hijrah - an Islamic school which was placed in special measures in 2013 - is not one of 25 schools being investigated as part of the Trojan Horse allegations. | Al-Hijrah - an Islamic school which was placed in special measures in 2013 - is not one of 25 schools being investigated as part of the Trojan Horse allegations. |
The so-called Trojan Horse letter, which the council said was sent anonymously, contains details of an alleged plot to make schools adopt policies consistent with hard-line Islamic principles. | The so-called Trojan Horse letter, which the council said was sent anonymously, contains details of an alleged plot to make schools adopt policies consistent with hard-line Islamic principles. |
Mr Yaqub, who said he believed the letter was fake, said council officers had used it "to turn on us and use Muslims as scapegoats". | |
He said "repeated Ofsted inspections" had been used to "destabilise" the Muslim faith school and bring it under council control. | |
A Birmingham City Council spokesperson said the Department for Education had approved the council's application to appoint temporary governors and disband the previous executive board. | |
The school had resisted moves to replace its governors on Thursday, but a second attempt will be made on Monday, it said. | |
A council spokesperson said a series of inspections by Ofsted "showed a serious decline at Al-Hijrah school that requires urgent improvement". | |
It said there were "continued failings relating to the school's governance, financial stability and its improvement plan". | |
Labour MP for Perry Barr, Khalid Mahmood, a critic of the way the school has been run, defended the city council. | |
He said it was "perfectly within its legal rights" to carry out the investigation and he did not know "where this (former) governor is getting these notions from". | |
This article was amended on 28 May when it became clear that allegations the letter was faked were not made against the city council. |