The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #75099   Message #3759590
Posted By: GUEST
19-Dec-15 - 07:42 AM
Thread Name: BS: Who's Next? Iran or Korea?
Subject: RE: BS: Who's Next? Iran or Korea?
School chief Shahid Akmal told an undercover Mirror reporter that "white women have the least amount of morals", white children were "lazy" and that British people have "colonial blood".

Akmal claimed that women were "emotionally weaker" than men and that their role was to look after children and the home.

He defended jailing or exiling gays and adulterers under Sharia Law as a "moral position to hold".

Until last week, Akmal was the chairman of governors at Nansen Primary School in Birmingham, where music was banned and inspectors found pupils were not sufficiently protected from radicalisation.

The hardliner revealed he has plans to set up a series of after-school tuition centres to instil "our morals and our values and our principles" in impressionable youngsters.

Over a series of meetings with our reporter, Akmal made a string of extraordinary statements and defended Brits fighting in Syria and Iraq as "freedom fighters".

In a defiant attack, Akmal claimed the Government wanted to keep Muslims "suppressed" so they are easier to control.

Our exposé comes after a leaked official report found there was a "sustained, coordinated agenda to impose segregationist attitudes and practices of a hardline, politicised strain of Sunni Islam" on children

A scathing assessment from schools inspectors Ofsted found that Akmal's board of governors were "overly controlling".

Music had been removed from the timetable and children were "not prepared for life in modern Britain".

Posing as a wealthy Asian ­businessman, our reporter approached Akmal's training firm Exquisitus as a potential client.

Over a number of coaching sessions in London hotels, Akmal revealed his deep hostility to the modern British way of life. He revealed: "My grandfather refused to let us speak English at home. "He said, 'You leave English at the door. When you come inside you speak your own language'.

A scathing assessment from schools inspectors Ofsted found that Akmal's board of governors were "overly controlling". Music had been removed from the timetable and children were "not prepared for life in modern Britain".

Posing as a wealthy Asian ­businessman, our reporter approached Akmal's training firm Exquisitus as a potential client. Over a number of coaching sessions in London hotels, Akmal revealed his deep hostility to the modern British way of life.

He argued that girls should be taught skills such as cooking and sewing while boys should be taught trades like construction and mechanics. Akmal attacked women who became "high flying" politicians: "She has to sacrifice her family, she has to sacrifice her children, she has to sacrifice her husband, all in the name of equality. "And there are so many marriages that have broken up because of this." He admitted that women can be as intelligent as men but added "emotionally women are much weaker... they are not on the same level".

Akmal dismissed a boycott of businesses owned by the Sultan of Brunei over the death penalty in the Middle Eastern country for homosexuality and adultery. He said: "The thing is, it's his right and it's his country, so why shouldn't he?"

Akmal said that homosexuals, adulterers and "fornicators" who have sex outside marriage should be exiled from their community. "The Koranic concept is that anyone who causes disruption in the community, even if you put them in prison, from prison they can continue to cause disruption as well," he said. "So the best thing to do is to actually exile them so that the community can remain solid and united. It's a moral position to hold."

He attacked what he called "man-made" British law as "very confusing" and defended laws "given by God" as "fair even though you may not understand it".

Akmal appeared to defend British Muslims joining rebels in Syria and Iraq, despite official warnings of a terrorism threat when they return to the UK. He said: "The fact that he has gone there to fight, they say that he is supporting terrorists. Because they don't believe in the freedom fight."

He said: "They basically don't want the children to do any better because they will demand education, they will demand better qualifications, they will want to go to Oxford and Cambridge and that's a white only place. "Very few non-whites go there. They want to keep us suppressed. "It's easier to control. If you get ­education you get a mind. When you get a mind, you ask questions. They don't like that."

Birmingham MP Khalid Mahmood said: "This investigation backs what I have been trying to fight against.The hardline ideology which put poison in our classrooms"

The schools had a "narrow Islamic-focused curriculum", with evidence of misogynistic, homophobic and antisemitic teaching material, Wilshaw said. Of the three, the only one to be named is Bordesley Independent School, where inspectors found dirty mattresses and a lack of running water in conditions described as unhygienic and filthy.
Sir Michael Wilshaw said he was concerned organisations received "confusing and unhelpful" advice from the Department of Education that they can continue to operate while applying to register.
In a letter to Education Secretary Nicky Morgan, he warned: "This sends out an entirely wrong message of what the DFE perceives to be acceptable practice".
It is thought around 800 pupils across the country are being taught at these schools, which cater to Muslim communities as well as some other faiths. It is the second time in a month that the Ofsted chief inspector has written to Morgan to express alarm over the issue.
The founders of three unregistered schools in Birmingham could face being jailed after the Education Secretary demanded Ofsted prepares prosecution cases against them.
He reported "serious fire hazards, including a blocked fire escape and obstructed exits" and "inappropriate books and other texts including misogynistic, homophobic and anti-Semitic material".
He said such schools were "a serious and growing threat to the safety and wellbeing of hundreds of children in several English regions". "Ofsted's work to ensure that all maintained and independent schools promote British values is being seriously undermined by the growth of these settings".
EXTREMISTS running Islamic schools could be jailed under new powers of prosecution to be given to schools inspectors. Mrs Morgan said: "Tackling extremism in all its forms is a key priority of this Government and since 2010 I have taken robust steps to tackle unregistered schools and improve safeguarding".