Britain has ‘problem’ with Islamist extremists trying to force views on Muslim kids, Michael Gove warns
BRITAIN has a “problem” with Islamist extremists trying to force their views on Muslim kids, Michael Gove has warned.
The Communities Secretary said radicalisation is an “ugly truth” in the country but is not spoken about enough for fear of being slammed as Islamophobic.
Mr Gove hit back at left–wing critics trying to “rewrite the history” of the Trojan Horse scandal.
He was Education Secretary in 2014 when several Birmingham schools were subject to hardline Islamisation.
Together with former Home Office adviser Nick Timothy, he has written the foreword to a new Policy Exchange report exposing a “concerted campaign” to play down the saga.
They say: “The notion that the events in Birmingham had nothing to do with extremism is as dangerous as it is false, since it conceals an ugly truth that too many prefer not to acknowledge.
“We have a problem in Britain with Islamist ideology and its adherents, who seek to impose their intolerant values on Muslim communities, including children.”
Mr Gove added: “The fear of being branded ‘Islamophobic’ has only made it more difficult to speak up about such extremism.”
Cabinet Minister Mr Gove and Mr Timothy - former chief of staff to Theresa May - point to a “well organised campaign” trying to undermine the Government’s counter-radicalisation efforts.
They also slam a recent New York Times podcast that alleges the Trojan Horse affair was a “hoax” driven by Islamophobia.
Most read in The Sun
The pair blast that it was “replete with errors and omissions” and brand the left-leaning newspaper “useful idiots”.
Birmingham Labour MP Khalid Mahmood, a Muslim, also slams the New York Times for stirring up a “false victimhood narrative”.
They all endorse the “excellent” Policy Exchange report that urges the Government to open an investigation into the impact of being called racist for reporting cases of extremism.