wow this is disgusting!!!
- Report condemned Olive Tree Primary School in Luton, Berkshire
- Accused of promoting Salafi ideals, which includes imposing Sharia law
- Claimed it did not prepare children 'for life in modern Britain'
- Inspection was abandoned last week after parents complained
- Claims children as young as nine were being quizzed about homosexuality
Published:
15:08 GMT, 22 May 2014
|
Updated:
07:10 GMT, 23 May 2014
A Muslim primary school has
been heavily crictised by Oftsed because the library is said to contain
books which advocate 'fundamentalist Islamic beliefs' and punishments
under Sharia law, including stoning women.
An
inspection at Olive Tree Primary school in Luton, Bedfordshire, was
abandoned last week after parents reacted angrily to inspectors quizzing
their children about homosexuality.
Now
an unpublished report by the school's watchdog has condemned the school
for promoting Salafi ideology and suggested it does not prepare its
pupils 'for life in modern Britain, as opposed to life in a Muslim
state.'
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Oftsed inspectors said books in the library at
Olive Tree Primary School in Luton, Bedfordshire, contained books which
advocated punishment under Sharia law, including the stoning of women
Muslims
involved in the Salafi movement promote Sharia law, the Islamisation of
society and those who practice the ideology advocate jihad against
civilians.
According to The Guardian, the report said some of the content of the books were set 'firmly within a Saudi Arabian socio-religious context'.
It reads: 'Some of the views promoted by these books, for example stoning women, have no place in British society.'
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Ofsted inspectors abandoned a review of the
school last week after parents complained their children were being
asked about homosexuality
Staff
from the school denied the allegations, describing them as a 'complete
fabrication', and said there were no books in the library that advocated
extremist beliefs.
Farasat Latif, the school's chair of govenors told the paper:
'We have a large number of books about different faiths, which
inspectors failed to to notice, including The Diary of Ann Frank.'
An
Ofsted spokesperson said, 'We have shared a draft copy of the
inspection report in confidence with the school for factual accuracy
checking as is our standard practice.
'The final report will be published shortly.'
Last
week, parents were said to be concerned that the Ofsted staff were
discussing sex with the children, without their consent.
A scheduled meeting between parents and
inspectors saw the appropriateness of the questioning raised and after
discussions the inspectors withdrew from the school a day early.
The news that inspectors
withdrew from the school comes following reports a similar line of
questioning was used on Muslim pupils into an investigation into schools
in Birmingham over the alleged Trojan Horse plot.
The Trojan
Horse plot involves the alleged ousting of headteachers, mainly in and
around the Birmingham area, by Islamic extremists attempting to take
over several schools in a bid to target vulnerable young people.
Whistleblowers
at Park View School in the city have claimed the school is in the hands
of a group of extremists who infiltrated the governing body.
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The Park View School in Birmingham - which,
according to whistleblowers, has been infiltrated by Islamic extremists
who are attempting to change the school and target young people
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