LILLE, France: A French court ruled that a Muslim school could continue to receive state subsidies after local authorities in 2023 cut funding over alleged “serious breaches” of teaching rules, the court and its management said.
Private schools can receive state subsidies in France under a contract with the government, so long as they are open to all students, and follow the state´s education guidelines.
The Averroes school, founded two decades ago in the northern city of Lille in the wake of a ban on the Muslim headscarf in schools, regularly scores highly in academic standards. But regional state authorities in November 2023 said they suspected the Averroes school had received illicit financing, and noted a book referring to the death penalty for apostasy and gender segregation listed in a bibiography for teachers giving a Muslim ethics class. Georges-Francois Leclerc, the prefect who suspended the funding in December 2023, told a parliamentary inquiry this month that he believed students were “in danger”, and accused some teachers of having ties to Islamism.
The administrative court in the northern city of Lille on Wednesday however found that there had been insufficient proof of any “serious breaches” in education guidelines and that the procedure followed to cut funding had been “tainted with irregularities”. It said authorities had not managed to demonstrate any “lack of cultural pluralism” in reading materials, any breach of guidelines in Muslim ethics classes, or any “illegal funding”.