Protests Erupt On France's Corsica, Following Ban On Native Language Use - The Guardian
Date
3/13/2023 5:33:50 AM
(MENAFN- Trend News Agency) BAKU, Azerbaijan, March 13. Following Corsica's
court ban on use of the Corsican language in the public
institutions, protests have erupted on the island, trend reports, citing an article in The
Guardian.
The decision was made because the administration of Emmanuel
Macron was negotiating with local politicians to grant Corsica
greater autonomy. The lawsuit was filed by the Prefect of Corsica,
the highest official of the central government on the island.
'This decision amounts to stripping Corsican parliament members
of the right to speak their language during debates,' the island's
executive council president, Gilles Simeoni, and Corsican assembly
president, Marie-Antoinette Maupertuis, said.
'Accepting this state of affairs is unthinkable for us,' they
said in a joint statement, announcing an appeal against the
verdict. The Corsican language needed to be given official status
alongside French for it to survive and develop, they added.
As the article noted, Core in Fronte, pro-independence party
tweeted, in Corsican, that it considers the verdict 'shameful'.
'Corsica has a fraught relationship with France's central
government, with nationalist movements having demanded more
autonomy or even outright independence for several decades,' the
article said.
The Guardian noted that Last month, Macron stated that he had
'no taboo' to change the status of Corsica, which is a sunny
Mediterranean island, a favorite holiday destination. But he
insisted that Corsica should remain part of France.
'New negotiations between Paris and Corsican leaders appear to
have been unblocked by the conditional release of two men convicted
of participating in the 1998 murder of the island's prefect Claude
Érignac, the highest-ranking French official to have ever been
assassinated,' the article added.
Meanwhile, the UNESCO Cultural Agency believes that the Corsican
language, which is similar to standard Italian and has about
150,000 speakers, is endangered.
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