Free language courses lure non-citizens

Published: 2 October 2001 y., Tuesday
Just three days after the launch of a 2,000-place, free-of-charge Latvian language training program on Sept. 19, almost all the places had been snapped up, reported Janis Kahanovics, deputy director of the Latvian Naturalization Board. Kahanovics said the program would encourage Latvia's 535,000 non-citizens to undertake naturalization procedures, which require applicants to have a certificate of basic proficiency in Latvian. Non-citizens, who make up almost a quarter of the population, are mostly Russian speakers of Russian, Belarusian, Ukrainian or Polish origin. They cannot vote in national or local elections and are barred from holding jobs in state institutions. Kahanovics expressed regret that the board will have to turn away people who sincerely want to learn Latvian and become citizens. In its first year the Latvian Language Intensive Teaching Program, a joint effort of the state's naturalization board and the Council of Europe's Office for Security and Cooperation in Europe, will receive funding of $216,000 - pledged by the U.S., Swedish, and Norwegian governments. The United States' and Sweden's contribution is $90,000 each, while Norway's is $36,000. Previously, members of certain professions, such as teachers and medical staff, could enroll on state language training programs at no cost, but this is the first time courses will be open to the public free of charge.
Šaltinis: baltictimes.com
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 co-operation projects

GERMANY TO INVEST 40 MILLION EUROS A YEAR IN COOPERATION WITH RUSSIA IN THE FIELD OF SCIENCE AND EDUCATION more »

BELARUS LAUNCHES SATELLITE TV CHANNEL

Belarus on 1 February inaugurated broadcasts of its first satellite-television channel, Belarus-TV more »

The Standby Module

RUSSIA VIEWS KAZAKHSTAN AS POTENTIAL PARTNER IN ISS ENLARGEMENT more »

Titan probe beams breathtaking photos

The world has got its first look at the surface of the Saturnian moon Titan with European space probe Huygens beginning to send breathtaking pictures more »

Intel to launch complete Media Center systems

CES 2005: This is going to cause unhappiness more »

Unknown scenarios

Saturn's first probe to land 'with a thump or a squelch' more »

Enhancing Partnership

RUSSIAN STUDENTS FOR MORE CHANCE TO GET TO GERMANY, PROMISES CHANCELLOR SCHROEDER more »

Cisco Partnerships Power Networks

While it doesn't aspire to be a consulting company, Cisco Systems Inc. does think it can show enterprises how to transform their networks to deliver new, intelligent services that can help them build their businesses and improve productivity. more »

Global ICT Conference Begins in Baku

A three-day global information communication technologies conference, “Digital Divide and Knowledge Economy: Problems and Solutions”, started at the Gulustan Palace of Baku on Thursday more »

TV Meets IP

Internet technologies promise to soon take couch potatoes to worlds far beyond TiVo more »