CoE report says minority language protection increased in Hungary, calls for further efforts

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Brussels (MTI) – The Council of Europe (CoE) Committee of Experts praised Hungary in a report published on Wednesday for the increased political support of minority languages which has resulted in increased funding but noted shortcomings in minority education and language teaching, especially in the case of the Roma.
Hungary has highly detailed and complex legislation governing national minority policy and the use of all 14 minority languages, the report said.
The CoE said that positive change in Hungary’s minority policy has resulted in the increase of the state subsidies for the national minorities’ self-governments and all 13 legally recognised national minority groups have their own spokesperson at the Hungarian Parliament.
The experts highlighted that efforts in recent years resulted in positive developments in the education of regional or minority languages. National minority self-governments continue to play an important role in the promotion and protection of minority languages at county and local levels pursuant to the applicable law, they said. However, the current centralisation of education and the financial schemes based on tenders leave less flexibility to national minority self-governments in operating minority schools or classes, they added.
The CoE experts called on Hungary to develop a structured long-term policy and plan for education in all minority languages. They recommended increased bilingual education at all levels with a view to moving from the model of only teaching the minority language as a subject to bilingual education. They also recommended an increase in the number of teachers able to teach subjects in these languages and improve the educational offer of Romani at all levels of education.
They said major progress has been made with regard to issuing teaching materials in some languages such as German and Croatian while further improvements are needed in producing teaching materials in Romanian, Serbian, Slovak and Slovenian.





