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'Trojan Horse': Government criticises education select committee | 'Trojan Horse': Government criticises education select committee |
(about 11 hours later) | |
The government has claimed MPs risked undermining efforts to tackle extremism by downplaying the seriousness of the "Trojan Horse" events in Birmingham. | The government has claimed MPs risked undermining efforts to tackle extremism by downplaying the seriousness of the "Trojan Horse" events in Birmingham. |
The Department for Education was responding to the education select committee's report on an alleged school takeover plot led by a conservative group of Muslims. | |
Published in March, the report found only one incident of extremism. | |
It also said there was no evidence of a plot take over the city's schools. | |
The Department for Education said: "This downplays the seriousness of events in Birmingham and risks undermining our efforts to tackle extremism. | The Department for Education said: "This downplays the seriousness of events in Birmingham and risks undermining our efforts to tackle extremism. |
"It is important to state clearly just how damaging these were to the young people in the care of those schools." | "It is important to state clearly just how damaging these were to the young people in the care of those schools." |
Several inquiries and investigations were launched after an anonymous letter surfaced last March containing instructions for installing sympathetic school governors. | |
It has since been declared a hoax, and claims made about a number of schools named in the letter have been deemed groundless. | |
However, 21 schools were investigated by Ofsted after the letter was published, with five put into special measures last year. | |
Birmingham City Council has introduced new rules for appointing governors in the wake of the controversy. |