Chirac urges action on dying languages (fwd)

phil cash cash cashcash at EMAIL.ARIZONA.EDU
Mon Jun 9 21:46:18 UTC 2008


Chirac urges action on dying languages

Article from: Agence France-Presse
>From correspondents in Paris
June 10, 2008 07:18am
http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,23839694-5003402,00.html

FRANCE'S former president Jacques Chirac today launched his new foundation,
calling for action to save dying languages and confront what he termed the twin
crises in nature and culture.

The 75-year-old ex-president was joined by former UN secretary general Kofi
Annan, three Nobel Peace laureates and about a dozen other former leaders for
the launch of the foundation in Paris.

The event marked the return of Mr Chirac to the public stage, a year after he
handed over to Nicolas Sarkozy and turned the page on 40 years in politics, 12
of which were spent at the Elysee presidential palace.

The foundation will support projects aimed at promoting sustainable development
and cultural diversity, with a special focus on languages and cultures
threatened with extinction.

"Of the 6000 languages spoken today in the world, 90 per cent are at risk of
disappearing in the course of this century," Mr Chirac said at the inauguration
at the Quai Branly museum in Paris, which opened under his presidency.

"Is this what we want? A world which would be impoverished and which could only
preserve what is immediately profitable?" he asked.

Mr Chirac called on the United Nations and the UN cultural agency UNESCO to
organise a world summit to "consider solutions" through the use of technology
to save dying languages.

The foundation itself is launching the first project of a program to preserve
what is left of Araki, now spoken by only eight people on the Polynesian island
of Vanuatu.

It has enlisted the help of Nobel Peace laureate Rigoberta Menchu, a rights
activist and champion of the Mayan culture, to work on preservation of
indigenous languages in the Americas.

Mr Chirac said the world faced "twin crises" in nature and culture, because of
environmental degradation and the rise of xenopohobic behaviour and terrorism.

"One will not be resolved without the other," he said.

The foundation is also supporting projects to promote access to water and
medicines in west Africa and to combat deforestation in the Congo Basin.

In west Africa, the foundation will train members of local communities in water
management as part of a multi-billion-euro program of the African Development
Bank to promote access to clean water.

A quality-control laboratory for medicines in Benin is also getting support from
the Chirac Foundation to combat fake and substandard drugs that cost lives.

In partnership with the Geneva-based Tropical Trust Fund, the foundation is
supporting efforts to prevent deforestation in the Congo Basin and to open an
indigenous-language radio station to broadcast to Congolese Pygmy communities.

Mr Chirac also has plans to travel including a trip to China that was delayed
after he underwent a pacemaker operation in April.

Since returning to life as a private citizen, Mr Chirac has kept a low profile
as he battled corruption allegations.

In November, he became the first former French head of state to be placed under
formal investigation - a step toward full criminal charges.

Mr Chirac is suspected of misappropriating city funds for political ends when he
was mayor of Paris from 1977 to 1995. He has denied any wrongdoing.


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