Banner Telefónica
  • Login
Saturday, June 7, 2025
No Result
View All Result
  • es Español
  • en English
subscribe
thediplomatinspain
video channel
  • Frontpage
  • News
    • Spain
    • World
    • The world in Spain
    • Diplomatic Breakfast
    • Diplomacy with a history
    • The bag
    • Social life
  • Tribune
  • Analysis
  • Trends
  • Embassies
    • Embassies Directory
    • Protocol
    • International legislation
  • UNWTO News
  • Leisure
    • Libros
    • Culture & Art
    • Música
    • Movies
    • Niños
    • Espectáculos
    • Teatro
  • Diplomatic club
  • Vip Club
  • Frontpage
  • News
    • Spain
    • World
    • The world in Spain
    • Diplomatic Breakfast
    • Diplomacy with a history
    • The bag
    • Social life
  • Tribune
  • Analysis
  • Trends
  • Embassies
    • Embassies Directory
    • Protocol
    • International legislation
  • UNWTO News
  • Leisure
    • Libros
    • Culture & Art
    • Música
    • Movies
    • Niños
    • Espectáculos
    • Teatro
  • Diplomatic club
  • Vip Club
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
thediplomatinspain
Home Frontpage

Sweden reluctant to accept Catalan, Basque and Galician as official EU languages

Redacción
14 de September de 2023
in Frontpage, Frontpage, News, Subscribers, The world in Spain
0
Sweden reluctant to accept Catalan, Basque and Galician as official EU languages

Jessika Roswall, Swedish Minister for European Affairs. / Photo: https://moderaterna.se/

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
The Diplomat

 

The Swedish Government has expressed its doubts regarding the acceptance of Catalan, Basque and Galician as official languages of the EU, requested last August by the Government and which has been included by the Spanish Presidency in the agenda of the next Council of Ministers of General Affairs of the Union.

 

The Swedish Minister of European Affairs, Jessika Roswall, declared yesterday that her Government -presided by the conservative Ulf Kristersson- is “undecided” on this issue and wishes to examine “in greater depth” the “legal and financial” consequences of the proposal, as reported by the Europa Press agency. Roswall also recalled that there are “many minority languages that are not official within the EU”.

 

In mid-August the Council of the European Union received a request from the Spanish government for Catalan, Basque and Galician to be recognized as official languages of the Union. The initiative came about, as recognized by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, José Manuel Albares, by virtue of the agreement reached with Junts per Catalunya, the party of Carles Puigdemont, in order to support the candidacy of the Socialist Francina Armengol to preside over the Congress.

 

For this to be possible (and this was requested by Albares to the Secretary General of the Council, Thérèse Blanchet), it is necessary to amend the Regulation governing the official languages of the EU. For this reason, the Spanish Presidency has placed on the agenda of the General Affairs Council, scheduled for September 19 in Brussels, a debate, “with a view to its adoption”, on “a request from Spain to amend Regulation No. 1/1958 to include Catalan, Basque and Galician in the EU’s language regime”.

 

According to Albares, the fact that the Council is chaired by “the same state that is requesting it does not represent “any anomaly” and this is what the legal services of the Commission and the Council, which the Government has consulted beforehand, have told him.

 

Any change in this sense requires the unanimity of the 27 EU Member States. In this respect, the acting Minister assured at the end of August, in declarations to Europa Press, that the Government was not aware of the opposition of any European Member State to the inclusion of these three languages and, therefore, that he was confident that this “firm proposal” would go ahead at the meeting of September 19.

 

The EU currently has 24 official languages. The most similar precedent occurred with Gaelic, which became an official language in 2007, two years after Ireland requested it and more than forty years after the entry of this country into the then European Community.

 

In 2022, Spain asked the European Parliament for Catalan, Basque and Galician to become languages of use -although not official- in the European Parliament, a proposal that is still being debated at present. Gaelic followed precisely the same path before its officialization in 2007. In the event that the 27 approve the legal incorporation of these three languages, the European Parliament would automatically have to accept these three languages. If they were finally approved, both the treaties and the rest of the documentation would have to be translated into Catalan, Galician and Basque, with the consequent cost in human capital.

 

 

ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

ECB rules out Spain’s Margarita Delgado to chair supervisory mechanism

Next Post

Peru expresses to Spanish businessmen its interest in regaining foreign investor confidence

Redacción

Redacción

Next Post
Peru expresses to Spanish businessmen its interest in regaining foreign investor confidence

Peru expresses to Spanish businessmen its interest in regaining foreign investor confidence

Recommended

Spain regrets new US sanctions against four ICC judges who judged Netanyahu

16 hours ago

Newsletter

"Stay informed through our pages and always stay one step ahead. With in-depth analysis, exclusive reports and comprehensive coverage of the events that are shaping our present, our newspaper is more than just news, it is a window to the future."

Sections

Newspaper archive

September 2023
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930  
« Aug   Oct »

About Us

The Diplomat in Spain is the reference digital newspaper for diplomats and companies that want to be well informed.

© 2024 The Diplomat in Spain.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

  • Login
No Result
View All Result
  • Frontpage
  • News
    • Spain
    • World
    • The world in Spain
    • Diplomatic Breakfast
    • Diplomacy with a history
    • The bag
    • Social life
  • Tribune
  • Analysis
  • Trends
  • Embassies
    • Embassies Directory
    • Protocol
    • International legislation
  • UNWTO News
  • Leisure
    • Libros
    • Culture & Art
    • Música
    • Movies
    • Niños
    • Espectáculos
    • Teatro
  • Diplomatic club
  • Vip Club

© 2024 The Diplomat in Spain.

Go to mobile version
  • English