Daily Mail

Schools linked to ‘terror academy’ are still running

- By Lucy Osborne and Sam Greenhill

SCHOOLS opened by Islamic clerics linked to an Abu Hamza ‘terror’ school that was shut down are still running.

Jameah Islameah was closed ten years ago after a police raid and dire Ofsted inspection­s.

Set in a Victorian mansion in the East Sussex countrysid­e, it was a suspected jihadi training camp.

Now it has emerged that other schools set up by the owners are still operating – and they are trying to reopen Jameah Islameah for pupils aged 11 and up.

Hook-handed Hamza – now serving life in a US prison for terror offences – allegedly presided over exercises with AK47 rifles, handguns and a mock rocket launcher.

Fellow hate cleric Omar Bakri Mohammed also lectured at camping trips held at the school, where children were taught sick songs praising terrorists, including one that began: ‘Come, mister Taliban, come bomb England.’

After anti- terror police and MI5 swooped in 2006, and following a series of Ofsted inspection­s, the Government forced the school’s closure in 2007. But now The Mail’s findings highlight how powerless officials are to crack down on breeding grounds for religious intoleranc­e.

The new Education Secretary Damian Hinds signalled a war on illegal schools and out- ofhours tuition centres. The Jameah Islameah former school building has been owned since 1997 by Islamic scholars Bilal Patel, Muhammad Anas and two others.

They are a band of Deobandi Muslims – the strict Islamic movement that gave birth to the Taliban in Afghanista­n – and have never given up on their mission to ‘educate’ the next generation of Islamic scholars.

Mr Patel and Mr Anas have been allowed to establish schools elsewhere. A legal loophole means part-time schools are not required to be registered with the Department for Education nor inspected by Ofsted, making it impossible to monitor its curriculum. At Al-Ashraaf, a secondary boys’ school in East London, the chairman Mufti Shah Sadruddin was filmed in 2013 saying all people who insult Islam should be put to death.

In a damning report published in October, Ofsted branded the 34-pupil school ‘inadequate’, its worst possible grade.

Failures included its legal duty to follow the Government’s Prevent strategy, which aims to stop pupils being drawn into terrorism. Mr Anas’s second school, Imam Zakariya Academy in East London, is also deemed ‘inadequate’ by Ofsted. Inspectors said pupils could recite the Koran but were not making enough progress in the wider curriculum such as science and art.

Mr Anas and Mr Patel are rarely seen in public, but the latter has appeared on panel events with other controvers­ial clerics.

Among them is Shaykh Riyadh ul- Haq, who is involved in schools in the Midlands.

He has previously described the West as ‘evil’ and advised children not to mix with non-Muslims or it will ‘destroy you, it will lead to your death’.

Mr ul-Haq says his comments have been taken out of context and his sermons from up to 16 years ago did not represent his current views.

Mr Anas said he was on the deeds of Jameah Islameah but was ‘not involved in any activities, decision making or anything else’ to do with the school, which he said he left in 1997.

A spokesman for Jameah Islameah denied the school was reopening, and said the website advertisin­g courses and boarding places must be a mistake.

The Department for Education has pledged additional resources to ‘take whatever action is required’ against ‘illegal and unsafe’ schools.

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