British schools shouldn’t have “segregated history curriculums” such as a “black history” module, the UK’s equalities minister said on Thursday. Responding to the comment of Labour MP Bell Ribeiro-Addy on the teaching of black history, Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative minister of state at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing, and Communities, said she is “completely against” the idea. “The fact is, black is a category that cuts across so many significant ethnic groups. There’s no way that we could have one piece of history module that would go in-depth,” Badenoch said. Badenoch argued that the government’s proposal of a “model history curriculum,” which she said “explains the story of Britain and all of our places within it,” is what the UK needs to do. “We cannot have segregated history curriculums for people of different skin color. I’m completely against that, and I don’t support it,” the minister added. The overhaul of history teaching in …