A judge is due to reconsider an order barring protesters who object to the teaching of LGBT lessons at a Birmingham primary school.



Bosses at education authority Birmingham City Council have taken high-court action following weeks of protests outside Anderton Park Primary School.

The protestors complain that the local-authority-run school should not be teaching pupils about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender relationships. But Anderton Park headteacher Sarah Hewitt-Clarkson says that the lessons are age-appropriate: for example, younger pupils are taught that some children may have two parents of the same sex.

Quick read: Head at centre of LGBT row says DfE is making protests worse

Background: Primary halts LGBT lessons as parents continue 'upsetting' protests

Opinion: 'Don’t get angry about the LGBT row…'

After the school was forced to close for half-term early, it asked a judge to impose an injunction at a High Court hearing in London on Friday, while children were on holiday.



Mrs Justice Moulder made an order barring protesters from gathering outside or near the school, from distributing leaflets and from making offensive comments about staff on social media.



The council has published her order on its website.



She made the order against three named people, as well as persons unknown.



But she said protesters had been given no warning of the council's application.



She said a judge should reconsider the injunction at a hearing in Birmingham on 10 June.



Any protester could also apply to discharge the order, she said.

There have also been protests outside Parkfield Primary, in Birmingham, after its assistant headteacher, Andrew Moffat, was shortlisted for the $1 million Global Teacher Prize. Mr Moffat was being recognised for developing the No Outsiders PSHE programme, which includes lessons about same-sex families.

This spring, the government passed legislation to make relationships education compulsory in all primary schools from September 2020.



Birmingham City Council leader Ian Ward said, after Friday's hearing, that legal action had been taken pending children's return to school on Monday and he called on parents to "engage in constructive dialogue" if they had concerns.



"All our schools must be safe spaces and we will not tolerate the ongoing intimidation of parents, hard-working school staff and local residents," he said.



"This interim injunction has been secured in time for the return to school on Monday and now hopefully the pupils will be able to continue their education in peace for the remainder of the summer term."



He added: "We'll continue to support the school and its staff and I would urge parents to take this opportunity to engage in constructive dialogue with the school about any concerns they may have."



A council spokesman said bosses had decided to make an "urgent" high-court application "in the light of increasing fears for the safety and wellbeing of the staff".



He said there had been a "serious escalation" in protests in the week before half-term and bosses had concluded that the "risk of harm" had become "too serious to tolerate".



Education secretary Damian Hinds, who had previously called the demonstrations "unacceptable", welcomed the injunction.