A draft of the government-ordered report into the so-called "Trojan Horse" plot targeting some Birmingham schools, marked "sensitive", has been leaked to British newspapers today.
It states: "Left unchecked, it would confine schoolchildren within an intolerant, inward-looking monoculture that would severely inhibit their participation in the life of modern Britain."
The inquiry, conducted by Scotland Yard's former counter-terrorism chief Peter Clarke, was ordered by former education secretary Michael Gove and began in April. The probe is one of several since the Trojan Horse scandal broke.
The plot involves the alleged takeover of secular state schools and the removal of secular head teachers in Birmingham by radical Muslim staff and governors.
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According to the Guardian, Clarke gathered 2,000 documents and generated 2,000 pages of interview transcripts from 50 witnesses, including former headteachers, teachers, council staff and school governors.
"The level of distress and anxiety felt by the witnesses cannot be overstated," he concludes.
Clarke denies the report is Islamophobic, saying the evidence shows a group of governors and senior teachers represented a form of Muslim extremism rejected by most Muslims in east Birmingham.
"The agenda, but not the tactics, involved stem from an international movement to increase the role of Islam in education," the report states.
Two organisations identified by Clarke as being behind the movement are the Muslim Council of Britain and the Association of Muslim Schools - UK.
In the 90-page interim report Clarke attempts to answer questions about some of the incendiary issues prompted by the "Trojan Horse" letter, an anonymous message sent to Birmingham council in November last year, claiming there was a hard-line Islam-inspired plot to takeover named schools in the city.