Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
International

British Watchdog To Question Schoolgirls On Hijab

IANS, 20 Nov, 2017 12:17 PM
    Britain's schools watchdog today announced that its inspectors will question primary schoolchildren on the decision to wear garments of faith like the hijab.
     
    The move follows concerns that girls as young as four are being forced to wear the Muslim headscarf to school.
     
    Ofsted chief Amanda Spielman fears that schools may be in breach of equality laws if young girls were required to wear religious garments while boys were not, The Sunday Times reported.
     
    "In seeking to address these concerns, inspectors will talk to girls who wear such garments to ascertain why they do so in the school," Spielman said.
     
    Spielman has also called on parents and the public to complain to head-teachers if they think schools are not treating girls and boys equally. If the school does not take the complaint seriously, the complainants should go directly to Ofsted, she says.
     
    A Sunday Times survey revealed that nearly a fifth (18 per cent) of 800 state primary schools in 11 regions of England list the hijab as part of their uniform policy, mostly as an optional item.
     
     
    One of the country's top state primary schools, St. Stephen's School in east London, revealed it had banned the hijab for girls under eight last year, despite protests by parents and intends to ban it for girls under 11 from September 2018.
     
    "There is no requirement for girls to wear the hijab until puberty. It is not appropriate in a primary school," said Neena Lall, head-teacher of the school where most pupils are from Indian, Pakistani or Bangladeshi backgrounds.
     
    The Ofsted chief announced plans to evaluate the hijab policy in schools after meeting British Muslim women and secular campaigners who are calling for a ban on the wearing of hijabs in primary schools. Some fear the rise of the classroom hijab is a sign of Islamic conservatism asserting itself in the UK.
     
    "Covering of young girls is often the first sign of young people being treated unequally. This often leads to girls being pulled out of swimming lessons, dance classes or other creative lessons," said Amina Lone, a former Labour party parliamentary candidate who was among those at the recent Oftsed meeting.
     
    The UK's Department for Education said that it was up to schools to set their own uniform policies.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Watch Video: 101-Year-Old Man Kaur Bags Gold In 100 Metres Sprint Event In Auckland

    Watch Video: 101-Year-Old Man Kaur Bags Gold In 100 Metres Sprint Event In Auckland
    Man Kaur's dash became more of a gentle amble the closer she came to the finish line, with more energy spent beaming at spectators than running.

    Watch Video: 101-Year-Old Man Kaur Bags Gold In 100 Metres Sprint Event In Auckland

    Australia Making It Tougher For Foreign Nationals To Become Australian Citizens

    Australia Making It Tougher For Foreign Nationals To Become Australian Citizens
    Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has announced major changes to citizenship laws, making it tougher for foreign nationals to become Australian citizens.

    Australia Making It Tougher For Foreign Nationals To Become Australian Citizens

    Woman Executive Who Ran Over 5 With Car In Pune, Arrested

    Woman Executive Who Ran Over 5 With Car In Pune, Arrested
    Sujata Shroff, director at a city-based realty firm, was arrested yesterday. She was later produced in a local court which granted her bail, they said.

    Woman Executive Who Ran Over 5 With Car In Pune, Arrested

    Attack On Sikh Cab Driver Troubling: Top US Lawmaker

    Attack On Sikh Cab Driver Troubling: Top US Lawmaker
    Reports indicate this could have been a hate crime, which makes this unacceptable attack all the more horrifying," Congressman Joe Crowley, chairman of the Democratic Caucus, said in a statement.

    Attack On Sikh Cab Driver Troubling: Top US Lawmaker

    Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report

    Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report
    Abhishek Gattani, 38, pleaded "no contest" when his wife approached the police

    Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report

    Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago

    Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago
    Three women dressed in burqas killed a man who had been accused of blasphemy in 2004 in a northeastern Pakistani town, police said on Thursday, the second brutal killing over alleged insults to Islam in a week.

    Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago