More than 100 students attended the sold out event about the existence of God. The talk - which took place in February - was led by Islamic speaker Hamza Tzortzis, who tours and speaks at many universities.
Photographs have appeared on the internet showing the signs at the entrance of the event. Somebody had attached two sheets of A4 paper to a door ā one read āBrothers (males)ā and the other āSisters (females)ā, with arrows pointing in opposite directions.
On their website, the University of Leicester Islamic Society states: āAll our lectures are, as weĀ believeĀ shouldĀ be,Ā free and open to the publicĀ (with segregated seating for brothers and sisters at all co-attended events).ā
The university said in a statement it was not aware of people being forced to sit in any particular seats but would āinvestigate whether entrances to the hall for this event were segregated by the society and will ensure there is no recurrence of thisā.
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Dan Flatt, academic affairs officer at the University of Leicester Studentsā Union said: āThe studentsā union does not believe in enforced segregation. We trust in ourĀ societiesāĀ ability to conduct their events in accordance with the principles of the union.ā Ā
The issue of gender segregation has already come to the forefront after UCL banned the Islamic Education and Research Academy (iERA) from taking part in events on its campus for segregating an audience at a talk last month.
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That event - named āIslam or Atheism: Which Makes More Sense?ā - had scheduled Mr Tzortzis and Lawrence Krauss, a professor of physics and well-known atheist, as participants. But Professor Krauss refused to take part until the audience could sit where they wished.
iERA said the event had seating which was open for all attendees, male or female, and two sections āto accommodate those that wished to adhere to their deeply held religious beliefsā.
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