Boris Johnson: Forcing children to wear a burkha to school is 'completely wrong' and contradicts British freedoms

Mayor of London's comments come after it emerged a number of UK secondary schools forced girls as young as 11 to wear the full Islamic veil

John Hall
Wednesday 18 September 2013 15:55 BST
Comments
Boris Johnson has said forcing children to wear a burkha to school is “completely wrong” and contradicts British values and freedoms.
Boris Johnson has said forcing children to wear a burkha to school is “completely wrong” and contradicts British values and freedoms.

Boris Johnson has said forcing children to wear a burkha to school is “completely wrong” and contradicts British values and freedoms.

Speaking after it emerged a number of UK secondary schools forced girls as young as 11 to wear the full Islamic veil, the Mayor of London said a burkha cannot be described as part of a school uniform, adding that he was “totally against kind compulsion in this matter”.

He added: “That is against my principles and it’s against the principles of liberty that London should stand for.”

Mr Johnson’s comments come after it was revealed that three independent fee-paying all-girls schools demand their pupils wear conservative Islamic clothing while outside the school.

Madani Girls’ School in Tower Hamlets and Jamea Al Kauthar School in Lancaster are said to demand all pupils wear a full burkha and black coat outside school, while Ayesha Siddiqa Girls School in Southall allegedly instructs pupils travelling between lessons to wear a gown that covers the head and body but leaves the face exposed.

Although all three schools are currently independent, there were reportedly plans to turn Madani Girls’ School into a state-funded Islamic school.

Mr Johnson’s comments appear to contradict a government statement earlier this week which said Downing Street backs the rights of schools to set and enforce their own uniform policies.

That statement had been released in response to a Birmingham-based college banning the wearing of veils in the classroom.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in