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Saleh inked a security agreement with the US in 2001 to track down alleged Al-Qaeda members.
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SANAA,
February 6 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The Yemeni
government is set to close 4,000 religious schools allegedly run by
“suspicious” organizations, an official has said.
According
to a government school survey, some of the private schools are
affiliated to scholars and political parties, said Yahia Al-Najjar,
the undersecretary of the Ministry of Religious Endowments (Waqfs).
“It
showed that many others were being supervised by foreign and local
charities on suspicion of being funded by outsiders under the guise of
beneficence,” Reuters quoted the official as having said.
The
Yemeni government decided in 2004 to shut down non-governmental
schools against a backdrop of bloody clashes between security forces
and followers of rebel leader Hussein Badrudin Al-Houthi, who was
killed along with dozens of his supporters in September.
Curricula
Najjar
said a close scrutiny of curricula taught in these schools showed they
preached violence and ran the risk of destabilizing society.
“The
curricula include books written by hardliners and extremists –
including Hussein Al-Houthi -- who don’t tolerate the other,” he
said.
The
official further said a large number of foreign teachers did unpaid
work for these schools.
“This,
in fact, raises many question marks and the government decided to take
it into consideration.”
The
would-be closure seems part of a broader government’s policy aimed
at cracking down on private religious education.
Minister
of Education Abdel Salam Al-Jawfi vowed in October to shut down
unofficial schools or place them under the government supervision.
In
2002, the government decided to oversee religious schools
administratively and financially and merge their budgets into the
ministry of education’s finances.
Yemeni
authorities had temporarily closed Al-Iman University in the wake of
the 9/11 attacks and asked its president Sheikh Abdel Majid Al-Zandani
to expel 500 foreign students in line with the counter-terror
policies.
Yemeni
President Ali Abdullah Saleh has been cooperating closely with
Washington’s in its so-called global war on terror.
During
a 2001 visit to the White House, he inked a security cooperation pact
on tracking down Yemenis allegedly linked to Al-Qaeda.
Parliament
Speaker Sheikh Abdullah Al-Ahmer has accused the US of using the
“fighting terror” slogan as
a thorn in the side of Arab and Islamic peoples.
Several
Arab and Muslim countries have come under intense pressures from the
Bush administration to change religious curricula viewed by Washington
as stirring anti-American sentiments.