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A teaching assistant who refused to remove her Muslim veil in the classroom
has been sacked.
Aishah Azmi’s dismissal from a Church of England primary school in Dewsbury,
West Yorkshire, followed a lengthy period of suspension over her insistence
on wearing the niqab in lessons led by a male teacher.
She had already failed to persuade an employment tribunal that she was a
victim of religious discrimination and harassment by Kirklees local
education authority.
Mrs Azmi, 24, said that it was her Islamic duty to wear the black veil, which
covered her face except for a narrow slit at the eyes, in the presence of
adult males who were not her blood relatives.
Headfield Junior School argued that its pupils, many of whom are learning to
speak English, found it difficult to understand what Mrs Azmi was saying
when her mouth was hidden.
In a statement issued yesterday, the LEA said that the school governing body’s
staff dismissals committee had recently held a hearing to discuss Mrs Azmi’s
case.
“As a result of the hearing, the committee decided to terminate the employment
of the employee concerned,” it said.
Shahid Malik, the Labour MP for Dewsbury, said that the Azmi case had not been
about religion but about seeking the best possible education for children at
the school.
More than 90 per cent of Headfield’s pupils are Muslim, many of them learning
English as a second language.
Earlier this year, Ofsted criticised “exceptionally low” standards of
achievement by pupils and said that many of the school’s difficulties were
caused by “speech and communication problems”.
Mr Malik said: “I’m obviously disappointed that a compromise could not be
reached. While I defend her right to wear the veil in society, it’s very
clear that her wearing the veil in the classroom inhibits her ability to
support children.”
When she was observed during lessons, the tribunal heard that, “it was readily
apparent that the children were seeking visual clues from her which they
could not obtain because they could not see her facial expressions”.
Mrs Azmi did not wear the veil when she was interviewed for the Headfield
post, nor at her first training day, but problems arose soon after she
started work on a one-year fixed contract last September. Although the
school’s other female Muslim teachers wore a headscarf, Mrs Azmi insisted on
wearing the niqab.
Mrs Azmi taught at the school for only a few weeks before being told that she
must be unveiled during lessons. Soon after she went on long-term sick leave
due to stress.
She was suspended on full pay in February and took her case against the school
to an employment tribunal which sat for four days in July.
Kirklees LEA renewed Mrs Azmi’s one-year contract after it expired on August
31, even though she was under suspension at the time.
When the tribunal issued its findings last month, it rejected her claims of
discrimination and harassment but awarded her £1,000 for “injury to
feelings” caused by the way her case was handled.
Mrs Azmi, whose appearance before the tribunal was a test case brought under
new religious discrimination regulations, vowed to continue her fight for
the right to wear the niqab.
She attacked the Government for treating ethnic minorities “as outcasts” and
said that she was “fearful for the consequences for Muslim women in this
country”.
Mrs Azmi’s lawyer, Nick Whittingham, of the Kirklees Law Centre, said that he
had not yet received a decision in writing following this week’s
disciplinary hearing.
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