Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Arie Slob, ChristenUnie, on Feb 4, 2012
Arie Slob, ChristenUnie, on Feb 4, 2012 - Credit: Anne Paul Roukema / Wikimedia Commons - License: CC-BY-SA
Crime
Politics
religion
Amsterdam
Noord Holland
Arie Slob
Cornelius Haga Lyceum
Islam
Friday, 15 March 2019 - 15:30

Share this article:

Amsterdam school director threatened the Education Inspectorate

A director of the Cornelius Haga Lyceum in Amsterdam told the Education Inspectorate last week that he "can not control his people", Minister Arie Slob of Primary and Secondary Education revealed during a parliamentary debate on the Islamic secondary school, Het Parool reports.

Last week the national coordinator for counterterrorism NCTV and and intelligence service AIVD revealed that employees of the school wanted to devote a large part of lessons to Salafist doctrine, and that some employees had links with terrorist organization Caucasian Emirate in the past. A short time later it was revealed that the Education Inspectorate was prevented from doing its job during an unannounced visit to the school on March 6th.

On Thursday, Slob told parliament what the Inspectorate was told. “A director said that if the lesson visits were to take place, there may be disturbances and that he could not control his people”, Slob said.

A number of parties in parliament wanted to know why these threatening words were not enough for Slob to stop the school’s funding with immediate effect, according to the newspaper. “There was the possibility to intervene, and that did not happen. A funding measure should have been taken”, CDA parliamentarian Michel Rog said. PvdA MP Attje Kuiken agreed: “That is possible immediately.”

Slob responded that the inspection visits restarted this week. “We would no longer have had the legal ground to suspend funding.”

EenVandaag and RTL Nieuws got hold of a provisional report about the school by the Inspectorate. According to the them, the inspectorate’s report is very positive. SP parliamentarian Jasper van Dijk therefore thinks that the school ‘tricked’ the Inspectorate - preventing an inspection to buy time to get everything in order.

A number of parliamentarians demanded that the provisional report be sent directly to parliament. Slob refused. “The report was not officially established, so in principle it does not exist”, he said.

Almost the entire parliament would prefer if the school is closed sooner rather than later, but in practice the Ministers of Education and Justice can not do it. During the debate, that lasted more than five hours, the parliamentarians cited articles from all areas of the law which could be used as basis to close the school. The coalition parties then submitted a motion calling on the government to explore all legal options for closing the Cornelius Haga Lyceum.

VVD parliamentarian Rudmer Heerema also argued for a future professional ban for teachers who now teach at the school, to prevent the from going to work at another school if the Cornelius Haga Lyceum closes. “They also play a role in this issue and we know who they are. I would find it very dangerous if these teachers could continue to teach at another school.

Earlier this week a group of Islamic organizations issued a joint call for the board of the Cornelius Haga Lyceum to resign. They want the board to take responsibility for the controversy that arose around the school, and to put their own interests aside in favor for the general interest of good Islamic education in the Netherlands.

More like this

Image
Festival crowd
Amsterdam festival reports vlogger who urged others to record Muslim women
Image
Hands painted in the rainbow colors of the Pride flag, forming a heart
Many Dutch school children think people with other sexual orientations are lesser
Image
Church
Limburg the only Dutch province that still has more religious people than not
Image
A Christian preacher
Churches from different cultures struggling to find space in the Netherlands
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Concerns over livestock heat stress; Animal abuse fines to rise 40 percent
  • Tractor driver collides with Amsterdam bicyclist, killing her instantly
  • Experts: Gold prices drive rise in home burglaries, highest level in about three years
  • Toddler rescued from overheated car as storms and 30°C heat gripped the Netherlands
  • Police release photos, ask for help identifying man who assaulted two women in Utrecht

Top stories

  • Police release photos, ask for help identifying man who assaulted two women in Utrecht
  • Hundreds of venues prepare to host fans for Netherlands vs Sweden World Cup match
  • Video: Severe storms kill woman after tree crushes car; Fires sparked nationwide
  • 15-year-old girl suspected of murdering parents in Groningen remains in custody
  • Storm warning joins heat warning: Temps up to 35°C, with hail, gusts, & downpours

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content