Home Secretary letter to Michael Gove on extremism in schools
4 Jun 2014 12:44 PM
Text of a letter sent on
Tuesday 3 June 2014
Voluntary Code of Practice for
Supplementary Schools
I am writing in response to your
letter to the Prime Minister seeking approval to launch a public consultation
on a voluntary Code of Practice for supplementary schools.
The publication of a Code of
Practice for supplementary schools was an agreed Extremism Task Force
commitment and we agreed at the conclusion of the ETF’s work that the
Code should be voluntary. However, since the publication of the ETF report in
December there have been serious allegations of extremism in some Birmingham
schools and accusations about the inability of local and central government to
tackle the problem effectively. In this context, I am not convinced that a
voluntary code is sufficient and I believe it would be sensible to include the
option of developing a mandatory code in your consultation
document.
I understand and share your
desire to include a clear and unambiguous definition of extremism and of
Islamist extremism, and indeed I was pleased that we were able to agree the
latter in the ETF report. It is important that having agreed these definitions
we now stick to them in the Code of Practice to avoid any
confusion.
We know that extremists try to
impose specific forms of dress on people and this includes the mandatory
veiling of women. The consultation document should be clear that nobody should
be forced to dress in a particular way. We do, however, need to recognise that
many moderate Muslims, as well as people of other religions, believe that
covering one’s hair is a religious requirement and some parents will
therefore want their children to do so. The text on dress requirements should
therefore not be part of the extremism definition but, consistent with the
Government’s already-stated position on the burqa, we should state
clearly that nobody should be forced to dress in a particular
way.
The allegations relating to
schools in Birmingham raise serious questions about the quality of school
governance and oversight arrangements in the maintained sector, not just the
supplementary schools that would be signatories to this Code of Practice. How
did it come to pass, for example, that one of the governors at Park View was
the chairman of the education committee of the Muslim Council of Britain? Is it
true that Birmingham City Council was warned about these allegations in 2008?
Is it true that the Department for Education was warned in 2010? If so, why did
nobody act? I am aware that several investigations are still ongoing and those
investigations are yet to conclude. But it is clear to me that we will need to
take clear action to improve the quality of staffing and governance if we are
to prevent extremism in schools.
I am copying this letter to
other members of the Extremism Taskforce.
The Rt Hon Theresa May
MP