“Islamism in
Birmingham schools: how the BBC is selectively reporting the 'Trojan horse'
plot” told Andrew “transcription
error” Gilligan earlier
this week, holding to his view that all those Scary Muslims were doing
something extreme to a number of schools in Birmingham. And he was more than
ready to accuse everyone else of lying – now there’s a familiar tactic – to keep
readers onside.
He goes on “It’s true
that one of the council officials at the meeting claimed they'd seen “no
evidence” of extremism in the schools, a line seized on by the Beeb. That
claim, however, is clearly false, the latest of many attempts by Birmingham
City Council to ignore or downplay the problems and its own
role in creating them”. Besides, Gilligan had the inside track.
“I too was leaked the
recording of Wednesday’s meeting between the heads and the council and I can
only say that the BBC’s account of it, at least in the online piece I've linked
to, was selective. As you can see from my own report, the council did
concede at the meeting that there were ‘very significant’ issues in the schools
and that it expected the official reports to have ‘serious implications for us
all’”.
However, and there is a significantly-sized however here,
Park View Educational Trust, which runs Park View and Golden Hillock secondary
schools as well as Nansen primary, has
decided to counter the Gilligan smears, such as the suggestion that Park
View is a faith school: “Park View is a
community school and does not have religious designation. It is not run as a faith school”.
The assertion that former Park View head Lindsey Clark was
somehow reduced to a figurehead is dismissed, as is the suggestion that a staff
member praised Anwar al-Awlaki. The collective act of worship – which for many
schools is Christian in character – is conceded to be Islamic, but – guess what
– there is nothing illegal or underhand about this, as readers of Gilligan’s
attacks may have concluded.
“The school applied
for a part-determination which exempts it from the statutory requirement for a
Christian act of worship and allows it to provide an act of worship that is
Islamic in character in accordance with the faith background of the children.
Ninety-nine per cent of students at Park View are from a Muslim background”. Thus far, Gilligan has not commented on
the document.
But what he has
said is “the Beeb's record on the
story has been mixed. It has done some real reporting on it – that is, making
the effort, like us, to gather actual evidence of its own. But on other
occasions it’s been too ready to take at face value the obviously self-serving
denials of obviously interested parties”. Like Gilligan takes at face value
his assumption of Scary Muslims.
Gilligan and Park View cannot both be right. So which one is telling the whopper?
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