An Amendment

Published: 12 January 2005 y., Wednesday
Poland`s Sejm (lower chamber of the national parliament) has passed an amendment providing that ethnic Belarusians residing in the country may use Belarusian in local public offices. As the Belarusian Service of RFE/RL reported, the amendment stipulates that local governmental agencies may use Belarusian as an "additional language" provided the Belarusian national minority accounts for 20 percent of the territorial unit`s population. An original version of the amendment set the percentage at 50 percent. The Sejm voted that numbers of people belonging to the Belarusian minority would be determined on the basis of the most recent population census conducted in Poland in 2002. Belarusians are the second largest national minority in Poland after Germans. According to Polish official sources, in the 2002 census, 47,640 citizens of Poland declared themselves Belarusians. Of them, 46,041 resided in the Podlaskie province. The Belarusian minority is represented in the 460-seat Sejm by MPs Eugeniusz Czykwin, Aleksander Czuz and Sergiusz Plewa. The Belarusian language is reportedly taught to 3,664 children in 40 public schools. Most of Poland`s Belarusians are members of the Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church.
Šaltinis: Charter`97 Press Center
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

How should we help balance family and career?

Equal opportunities for men and women, equal pay for equal work, freedom from unfair discrimination: these are fundamental European values. more »

A celebration of... SPAM?

SPAM Museum in Austin, Minnesota, a.k.a. Spamtown USA gives you a sense of the cult SPAM ham. more »

Books by Bali bombers being sold

Even though the Indonesian government has tried to stop The Martyrs' Trilogy publication, some copies of are personal writings by each of the three executed Bali bombers are being sold quietly in small book shops and stalls. more »

The European ombudsman at your service

If you think the EU institutions have made a mistake or failed to follow their own rules, you can ask the European ombudsman to investigate on your behalf. more »

Indian gaming gets political

7Seas Technologies Limited the creators of the political games came up with the idea to raise political awareness ahead of the elections. more »

For sale: one English village

The charitable trust which owns the whole of Linkenholt in the southern county of Hampshire wants to sell up the archetypal English village and use its money elsewhere. more »

Butcher fest in Hungary

In the butcher's festival in a village in eastern Hungary, the best butchers in the land gather to compete in speedy cutting, slicing and meat processing. more »

Reality tv star's cancer ordeal

The world's most famous reality TV star Jade Goody is dying of cancer. more »

Would you help a Jew?, asks WW2 show

It looks like a relic from the second world war but 'The Bunker' is in fact a brand new museum. more »

How safe is your pension?

The financial crisis may force EU countries to adjust pension systems. more »