Friday, August 17, 2018

Muslim teacher who said gays should be “eradicated” is back in the classroom

A Muslim teacher who labelled homosexuals “animals” who should be “eradicated” has lost a claim of unfair dismissal, where he argued he was discriminated against because he is Muslim.
That is the good news; the bad news is that Razwan Faraz and the other teachers have been allowed back into the classroom. Discrimination (aka “Islamophobia”) has become the fall-back position used to justify (with many past successes) virtually any infraction by Muslims, including Muslim rape gangs and the sharia courts that send women back home to their abusive husbands.
Faraz and five other suspended teachers have been allowed to return to the classroom after an independent disciplinary panel discontinued cases against them claiming government lawyers did not share crucial evidence. The National College for Teaching and Leadership panel decided they had no option but to stop the hearings for the school leaders accused of allowing undue Islamist influence in state schools.
“Mr Faraz insisted he has now changed his views about homosexuality and argued that the comments were an expression of his Muslim faith.” So if his views have changed, does this means he no longer holds to his “Muslim faith”? Islamic supremacists routinely lie, and when they break the law, they rarely receive adequate penalties.
The teachers were part of the so-called “Trojan-Horse” scandal where radical Muslim allegedly plotted to take control of schools funded by the taxpayer….and introducing lessons in Arabic.
But when non-Muslims warn of Islamic takeover schemes, they are called xenophobic conspiracy theorists.
“Trojan Horse’ Teacher Who Branded Gays ‘Animals’ Loses Religious Discrimination Claim,” by Liam Deacon, Breitbart, August 13, 2018:
A Muslim teacher who labelled homosexuals “animals” who should be “eradicated” has lost a claim of unfair dismissal, where he argued he was discriminated against because he is Muslim.
Razwan Faraz, 38, the former deputy headteacher at Nansen Primary School was one of five teachers suspended amid accusations of exercising undue of religious influence at three Birmingham academies.
The teachers were part of the so-called “Trojan-Horse” scandal where radical Muslim allegedly plotted to take control of schools funded by the taxpayer, with aspirations including banning sex education and Christian songs.
The schools were also accused of segregating pupils according to sex, banning the teaching of music and drama, and introducing lessons in Arabic.
Despite the claims, Mr Faraz claimed his dismissal was a result of religious discrimination. Faraz lost his job in 2015 over comments made in a Whatsapp group called “Park View Brotherhood” describing gay people as “animals”.
According to The Times, Mr Faraz insisted he has now changed his views about homosexuality and argued that the comments were an expression of his Muslim faith.
But a disciplinary panel rejected his defence, with his comments described as “demonstrably homophobic”.
A tribunal panel found that his comments “were a significant factor in causing the school to be brought into disrepute”. A judgment also described him as “evasive” and “not a credible witness”.
Despite this, Mr Faraz and five other suspended teachers have been allowed to return to the classroom after an independent disciplinary panel discontinued cases against them claiming government lawyers did not share crucial evidence.
The National College for Teaching and Leadership panel decided they had no option but to stop the hearings for the school leaders accused of allowing undue Islamist influence in state schools…..

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