marcolings writes "EPs voted in favour (on 14th January) for a resolution on fundamental rights. The resolution report, drafted by Giusto Catania (GUE/NGL), sets out new standards on a broad range of fundamental rights.
Key clauses, campaigned for by EBLUL last year, are for a
common definition and standards of national minority protection, a call for all member states to ratify the Framework Convention for National Minorities and the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages, a right to education in one's mother tongue, and targeted EU funding for European lesser-used languages.
The Report: "Underlines the importance of protecting and promoting regional or minority languages, noting that the right to speak and to be educated in one's mother tongue is one of the most basic fundamental rights." It continues that the, "EU's multilingualism policy should protect and promote regional and minority languages by targeted funding and specific programmes alongside the Lifelong Learning Programme" - both key EBLUL proposals.
Furthermore, it stressed the importance of political autonomy in helping to nurture stateless languages and cultures. It stated that: "the principles of subsidiarity and self-governance are the most effective ways of handling the problems of traditional national minority communities, following the best practices existing within the Union; encourages the use of appropriate types of self-governance solutions (personal-cultural, territorial, regional autonomies)…".
Referring to the successes of Welsh, Basque and Catalan autonomy.
While the resolution has no immediate legislative force, it does become the formal position of the European Parliament and will be instrumental in future legislation should any be brought forward. The Report will also become a useful tool for language campaigners from across Europe.
Eurolang spoke to Hungarian MEP Kinga Gal, the shadow rapporteur who worked hard on the Report and in getting her group, the EPP, to back it.
She said: "I consider it especially important the adequate reference to the situation of minorities in Europe – making a clear distinction between the traditional national minorities and new minorities, especially in Central and Eastern Europe. The report underlines that while the Copenhagen criteria made clear reference to the protection of minorities, in Community law criteria and norms are missing in the field of the protection of traditional national minorities.
Ms Gal continued, "It is a novelty and very important the paragraph which says that the principles of subsidiarity and self-governance are the most effective ways of handling the rights of people belonging to national minorities, following the best practices existing within the Union. The text encourages the use of appropriate types of self-governance solutions - which is again one of the basic claims of the big traditional minority communities, such as the Hungarians".
MEPs voted by 401 votes in favour, 220 against and 67 on the report.
The language and national minority clauses passed unamended, suggesting an increasing acceptance of lesser used language and national minority rights by MEPs.
(Davyth Hicks, Eurolang 2009)
"
Posted on Tuesday, February 17 @ 10:45:30 CET by dragonot |