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ANKARA: Turkey Must Amend 18 Laws For 2nd Official Language, Study F

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Must Amend 18 Laws For 2nd Official Language, Study F

    TURKEY MUST AMEND 18 LAWS FOR 2ND OFFICIAL LANGUAGE, STUDY FINDS

    Today's Zaman
    March 18 2009
    Turkey

    The Research Center of the Turkish Parliament has conducted a study
    into official languages in the parliaments of other countries following
    the debates caused by a speech by pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party
    (DTP) leader Ahmet Turk, who spoke in Kurdish during part of his
    speech at the meeting of his party's parliamentary group on Feb. 21.

    In order to allow the use of any language other than Turkish in Turkey,
    Parliament would need to amend its Constitution and 18 laws, the study
    found. Many laws including the Political Parties Law, the Election
    Law, the Associations Law and the Law on Adoption of Turkish Letters
    specify Turkish as the official language and prohibit the use of
    other languages.

    According to the study, in many countries, including France,
    Armenia, Algeria, Estonia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia and Latvia,
    it is compulsory to use a single official language. In Algeria and
    certain other countries, importing computer equipment, telex and other
    printing machines that do not print Arabic letters is banned. India,
    Canada, Ireland and Finland use two official languages. Yet, even the
    countries that allow the use of two official languages implement strict
    restrictions on their use. Canada, it seems, is the most lenient with
    the issue of official languages.

    In Germany, the constitution and laws do not contain specific
    provisions on an official language, and the various dialects of German
    are used in parliament for one day each year. Interestingly, the study
    does not make any reference to Belgium, in which Dutch, German and
    French are recognized as official languages, or to Switzerland, which
    accepts German, French, Italian and Romansh as its official languages.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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