U.S. likes Latvian language law

Published: 16 December 1999 y., Thursday
The United States welcomed Latvia_s new language law on Tuesday and urged the government to follow through by observing its international obligations. Parliament approved an amended version of the controversial bill on December 9 after protests from Moscow and EU about an earlier draft. "The United States believes this law will promote and preserve the Latvian language, while respecting the privacy of Latvia_s private commercial activities and the private lives of all of Latvia_s residents," U.S. State Department said in a statement released by the embassy in Riga. The law, which comes into force next September, boosts the use of Latvian language, which politicians say needs protection after it was marginalised by Russian during 50 years of Soviet rule. Moscow has criticized the legislation saying it discriminates against 650,000 Russian speakers. The U.S. statement recalled that social integration of non-Latvian speakers is a key goal of the U.S.-Baltic Charter of Partnership.
Šaltinis: MSNBC
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Presidents to meet in Slovakia

US President George W. Bush will meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Slovakia in late February as part of an expanding effort by the White House to improve relations with European nations more »

EU offers support for embattled Annan

The EU has offered its support for the Secretary General of the United Nations, Kofi Annan, amid allegations of misuse of UN funds more »

Bulgaria, Romania and Croatia given the go ahead

During a meeting dominated by possible Union membership for Turkey, EU leaders have also given the final green light for membership in 2007 to Bulgaria and Romania more »

Berlin to Limit Immigration of Russian Jews

Germany plans to stop offering unlimited immigration to Jews from Russia and Eastern Europe starting Jan. 1, 2006, according to several newspapers on Saturday more »

Baltic and Nordic countries seeking to reform UN

Estonian Foreign Minister Kristiina Ojuland has joined a memorandum by her Baltic and Nordic counterparts, calling for a reform of the United Nations Organization more »

The debate

ARMENIAN LEGISLATOR FORCES DEBATE ON COMPENSATION FOR DEVALUED SAVINGS more »

Japan Removes Visas for Bulgarians

Japan will remove the short-stay visa regime for Bulgarian citizens in a move confirming the friendly bilateral relations and partnership between the two countries more »

The Foreign Policy Goals

President-Elect Calls For Closer Relations With Eastern Neighbors more »

Balkan Leaders Focus on Ethnic Tolerance

Balkan leaders on Friday agreed that strengthening regional dialogue was the only way to prevent the return of ethnic violence that wracked the region in the 1990s more »

A new Prince of Orange

Romania's slow-burn revolution sends signal across Europe's hinterland more »