https://www.nius.de/Gesellschaft/sk...chsetzen/3c353efa-0ef7-4156-9d6d-c0d100daa699
In Neuss, North Rhine-Westphalia, four pupils are said to have acted as Sharia Police.
According to a report by the Rhenish Post, which relies on security circles, the young people between the ages of 17 and 19 had publicly spoken out in favour of the Sharia and put pressure on Muslim pupils who disagreed.
The students are said to have demanded that all women at school wear their headscarf. To this end, they made further demands: establishment of a prayer room, early school closing on Friday at the Muslim prayer period and a general gender segregation at the school, especially in swimming lessons.
The Rhenish Post cites from an internal paper of state protection, which states that Muslim pupils reported that pressure and criticism had been exerted on other Muslim pupils because they were not “good Muslims”. In addition, they publicly rejected democracy and supported stoning.
The students demanded gender segregation.
School management informs state protection
The school management already turned to the state protection in December. The prosecutor's office could not identify any crimes in the students' behaviour. One of the four students was briefly released from class.“We take – like all schools – as all schools – as do the overall social responsibility, democracy formation is not just our mission, it is our declared intention,” the school management said. “In view of our trusting cooperation within the school community, we are in constant exchange, negotiate our cooperation and trust and trust and seem to talk about perceived contradictions and contradictions openly. We look, and by putting tolerance and diversity at the centre of living together, we demand from all of us the appropriate basic attitude," says the school management.
The case shows parallels to the “Sharia Police” in Wuppertal ten years ago. The Salafist preacher and convert Sven Lau took part with other men as a “Scharia Police” on the streets of the Bergische city. They carried orange signal vests with appropriate inscription.