Ooni Koda
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. Newsfeed
  4. /
  5.  Minority languages in Romania: strong support in education,...

 Minority languages in Romania: strong support in education, but population threshold for public administration use too high

October 12, 2023

According to the new Council of Europe report released by the Committee of Experts which monitors compliance with the Council of Europe’s European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages acknowledges that Romania has a solid legal framework and policies for the protection of minority languages, including in education, but regrets that the population threshold for their use in the administration is too high.   The European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages applies to 20 languages in Romania. Ten languages (Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, German, Hungarian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Turkish and Ukrainian) enjoy higher protection since Romania has made additional commitments to promoting them in public life, particularly as regards their use in education, justice, public administration, media, economic and social life, culture, and transfrontier exchanges. The Charter also protects Albanian, Armenian, Greek, Italian, Macedonian, Polish, Romani, Ruthenian, Tatar and Yiddish.   The Committee of Experts highlights that Romania´s system for protecting minority languages shows best practices in many areas. The Romanian Constitution and specific laws provide a general protection framework, and large financial support is provided to 19 national minority organisations to promote their culture and languages.   However, the Committee of Experts expresses its concern that the 20% threshold in the national legislation for the use of minority languages in the administration seems to be too high and, if applied inflexibly, deprives speakers of minority languages of the full protection provided by the Charter. Following the 2021 census, which reflected a decrease in the national minorities population, the Committee of Experts calls on the authorities to consider the census results only as one indicator among others.   Considering that Romani is spoken as a mother tongue by at least 199,000 persons in the country and that it is estimated that the number of speakers is much higher, the Committee of Experts recommends that the Romanian authorities further promote the presence of Romani in public life, particularly in education.   Although German and Hungarian benefit from a very favourable situation in education, the report calls on the authorities to swiftly address the shortage of teachers – which also seriously affects Czech and Romani - including through incentives to make the profession more attractive.   As regards the use of some minority languages in judicial proceedings, the Committee of Experts regrets that persons submitting written documents in a minority language bear the extra costs of translation in civil and administrative proceedings, in contradiction with the provisions of the Charter.   Finally, the report praises the strong and comprehensive offer of cultural activities in minority languages, the satisfactory offer of radio programmes and that the Romanian Television has specific programming in Hungarian, German and other minority languages.    The third evaluation report of the Committee of Experts of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages is based on the information provided by governmental and non-governmental sources, including that obtained during its visit to Romania in February 2023.

Read in full - click here
One last star to shine: Corinthia Bucharest prepares the final act of its Michelin Dinner Series

Some dinners are eaten. Others are remembered. At Corinthia Grand Hotel du Boulevard, the past few months have unfolded like a quiet culinary opera. One by one, Europe’s most celebrated chefs arrived, took over the kitchen of Boulevard 73 and left behind more than menus; they left stories. Now, on December 4, the curtain falls. […]

HORIZON CITY - The New Residential Anchor of Northern Bucharest

HORIZON CITY, a €130 million residential project, is emerging as one of the most solid and forward-thinking developments in the Pipera area—both through its scale and through the modern direction it sets for the new residential standards in the north. Developed across nearly 23,000 sqm, with 699 apartments and 926 parking spaces, the project brings […]

Romania’s forestry authority Romsilva puts 16,000 Christmas trees up for sale

Romania’s National Forest Administration, or Romsilva, announced that it is putting over 16,000 Christmas trees up for sale over the winter in a press release published on Thursday, November 27. The trees can be purchased directly from the offices of the forestry districts. Prices range between RON 17 (EUR 3.3) for a spruce...

New 14 km segment of Romania’s A7 Moldova highway inaugurated

Lot 3 Pietroasele–Buzău of Romania's A7 highway, also known as the Moldova highway, was inaugurated on Thursday, November 27. The newly inaugurated segment is 13.9 km long. The A7 connects Romania’s historic regions of Muntenia, the southern part of the country, with Moldova, the eastern part. “We are opening another 13 km of the Moldova Motorway […]

Romania’s Sinaia inaugurates alpine coaster for year-round mountain fun

The City Hall of Sinaia, a popular mountain town roughly 120 km north of Bucharest, announced that a new attraction, the alpine coaster on Pârtia Nouă, will officially open on December 1. The installation, located in the ski area near the Sinaia Gondola, features what the authorities say is the longest track of its kind […]

Romania scores first win in group stage of Women’s Handball World Championship

The Romanian national team debuted with a victory in Group A of the Women’s Handball World Championship, organized in the Netherlands and Germany. Romania won 33–24 (13–12) against Croatia in the Ahoy Arena in Rotterdam on Thursday, November 27. The Romanian team dominated the match in the second half, left backer Sorina-Maria Grozav scoring 7 […]