A COUNCILLOR has hit out at Bolton UKIP after it claimed single-sex faith schools were “socially divisive”.

UKIP issued a statement after Tauheedul Free Schools Trust was given the go-ahead to build a £10 million muslim boys school, named Eden Boys, at the site of the former Wolfenden School in Astley Bridge.

UKIP singled out the school as an example of where single gender faith schools could harm community relations.

Joan Johnson, chairman of the Bolton branch, said: “It seems that, with the government’s free school programme, more and more single gender faith schools are being approved in Bolton.

“This would seem to be a retrograde step.

“UKIP is not anti-Islamic but we will encourage and promote social integration and will not subscribe to anything that is socially divisive.”

Bolton Council’s cabinet member for schools Cllr Kevin McKeon said he believed that inclusive, community comprehensive education was the best for children.

But he added that UKIP was wrong for trying to score political points by challenging faith-based education. He said: “The ideal is to have all classes with both genders, all the faiths taught in community schools.

“However, in Britain there has been a long tradition of diversity, and in Bolton we have three Catholic schools and two Anglican.

“The local authority is committed to working with all schools to ensure that all Bolton children have the advantage of a balanced education, and we have no fears that this will be different with the new free school.

“I regret that UKIP is making this a political issue, particularly at this time when community relations are at a very sensitive point.”

The school, which will have 700 places for boys aged 11 to 18, has already opened temporarily in the former Falcon View Social Education Centre in Cotton Tree with 150 pupils.

The new building is expected to open in September 2015.

Shabir Fazir from the Tauheedul Free Schools Trust said as a matter of policy he would not comment on anything political.

“Our school is required to admit 50 per cent of our pupils on non-faith grounds – so children of any faith can get admission into the school.”

At the planning committee where the Trust received planning permission for its 700-place school, UKIP Cllr Paul Richardson, who represents Little Lever, said: “The fact that it is a single-gender school means thousands of boys would be educated in isolation from girls of their own culture and boys and girls of other cultures.

“This would be socially divisive. We are going in the wrong direction – away from social integration.”