Taiwan To Stop Calling Mandarin Chinese Its National Language (fwd)

phil cash cash cashcash at EMAIL.ARIZONA.EDU
Tue Mar 20 17:03:32 UTC 2007


Taiwan To Stop Calling Mandarin Chinese Its National Language
http://www.playfuls.com/news_10_19951-Taiwan-To-Stop-Calling-Mandarin-Chinese-Its-National-Language.html

Taiwan took another step towards proclaiming its sovereignty Tuesday by
announcing that the government will stop referring to Mandarin Chinese
as Taiwan's national language.

Under the revised Language Development Bill, Taiwan will stop defining
Mandarin Chinese, the lingua franca of China, as the "national
language."

Instead, it will list Mandarin Chinese, Taiwanese, Hakka and Taiwan's
aboriginal tongues as its national languages, Chiu Chuang-liang,
director of the cabinet's council for Cultural Planning and
Development, said.

Taiwanese, also called Fukienese, is the dialect spoken by Taiwan
natives and by people in China's Fujian (Fukien) Province. Hakka is the
dialect spoken by Taiwan's 2 million Hakka people.

Taiwan has about a dozen aboriginal tribes, but their languages are
extinct or near extinction.

Mandarin Chinese has been Taiwan's official language since 1949, when
the Chinese Nationalist Government lost the Chinese Civil War and fled
to Taiwan to set up its government-in-exile.

Speaking in parliament on Tuesday, Chiu denied that scrapping Chinese as
the national language is part of Taipei's policy of disowning Chinese
influence, but to protect endangered languages.

"UNESCO has listed Taiwan's aboriginal languages as facing extinction.
So the amendment is to protect different languages and to make them
equal," he said, referring to the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization.

The Chinese Nationalists ruled Taiwan, formally called the Republic of
China, until 2000 when the Democratic Progressive Party won the
presidential election and DPP leader Chen Shui-bian became president.

Chen has been promoting Taiwan as a sovereign state, not part of China.
In October last year, Chen launched the name-change campaign to remove
"China" and "Chinese" as well as the name of the Chinese Nationalist
president Chiang Kia-shek from enterprise names.

So far Chen has renamed the Chiang Kai-shek International Airport as
Taoyuan International Airport, Chinese Petroleum Corp as Taiwan Chinese
Petroleum Corp, China Shipbuilding Corp as Taiwan International
Shipbuilding Corp, Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall as Taiwan Democracy
Memorial Hall, Chunghwa Post Co Ltd as Taiwan Post Co Ltd. "Chunghwa"
means "Chinese."

China, which sees Taiwan as its breakaway province, has warned that it
will use force to recover Taiwan if Taipei declares independence or
seeks formal separation from China by changing Taiwan's name "Republic
of China" or amending Taiwan's constitution.

© 2007 DPA



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