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The report concluded that based on the examination of emails and correspondence: "There is incontrovertible evidence that both senior officials and elected members of Birmingham council were aware of activities that bear a striking resemblance to those described in the Trojan horse letter many months before it surfaced."
The Trojan Horse Affair is a 2022 podcast about the Trojan Horse scandal. [1] [2] [3] The eight-episode series is hosted by Brian Reed, formerly a producer of This American Life and host of the podcast S-Town, and Hamza Syed, a reporter from Birmingham, England where the Trojan Horse scandal had unfolded.
Albert Bore (Labour Group leader) said the Labour Party did well in Birmingham because it was honest and open with the people of Birmingham and that the people of Birmingham felt they had been unfairly targeted by the Conservative led government. [citation needed] All results compared to 2012, which is the term that expired in 2015.
Michael Gove has announced commissioners will take over Birmingham City Council as part of a series of emergency measures for the bankrupt authority likely to include selling assets, cuts to staff ...
Birmingham City Council has reached an agreement to settle thousands of historic equal pay claims costing millions, just over a year after effectively going bankrupt.. GMB Union, which brought the ...
Birmingham City Council has reached an agreement to settle historical equal pay claims brought by two trade unions which left the authority with liabilities estimated at £760 million.
In February 2022, The New York Times released a podcast entitled "The Trojan Horse Affair" which was created by Brian Reed and Hamza Syed. [39] The podcast claimed that Nick Timothy contributed to the scandal when he emailed a Birmingham community centre which was due to host an event entitled "Trojan Horse or Trojan Hoax" in order to shut down ...
In 2014 the school was subject to an inquiry: see Operation Trojan Horse. [2] The school was put under investigation by Ofsted. In 2015 the Education Funding Agency (EFA) found financial irregularities to the amount of £70,000, including a payment of £27,000 to a public relations firm without authorisation from the EFA.