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Maltese will be an official EU language, This is what it means in practice?
After enlargement the EU
will have around twenty official languages, including Maltese. The EU treaties
will need to be changed (Article 314) to insert Maltese and the other new
official languages of the Firstly, all EU laws and
official documents will need to be translated into Maltese. This includes the
Official Journal of the European Union which is similar to our Government
Gazette. This point is particularly
important because it means that all EU laws that will bind Maltese citizens
will be available in a language that we all understand. Being informed and
being heard in your own language goes to the very heart of democracy. Secondly, Maltese citizens
may address EU institutions, such as the European Commission and the European
Parliament, in Maltese. Any citizen of an EU country can submit a complaint in
writing to the EU institutions. Maltese citizens would be able to submit their
complaint in Maltese. And if they do so, they will get a reply in Maltese. Thirdly, our Maltese
representatives in EU institutions would be able to speak in Maltese. This
includes sessions of the European Parliament. So far, whenever Maltese
delegations go abroad, they have always spoken in English. Now they will also
be able to speak in Maltese if they choose to do so. There are other practical
consequences. For instances, whenever job opportunities with EU institutions
arise, these would be open to EU citizens who would need to be able to speak in
two or more official EU languages. The fact that Maltese will be regarded as an
official EU language means that Maltese citizens applying for such jobs would
not be disadvantaged at having their mother tongue disregarded. Instead,
Maltese will be counted as a valid language for the selection requirements. Many rightly question why
the EU should have so many official languages. The answer is that the EU is
based on a diversity of different cultures and different languages. This makes
multilingualism an essential ingredient of the building of In brief, this is what we
mean when we say that This may explain why the
very first law that was adopted by the EU in April 1958 was to set the
conditions for the use of official languages. This law �
which will now need to be changed to include Maltese � states that the official
languages of the However, EU institutions
may stipulate in their rules of procedure which of the languages are to be used
in specific cases. In practice, on a day-to-day basis the normal working languages
that are used say, in the European Commission, are English, French and
increasingly, German. But the above does not mean
that there are no difficulties linked with having so many official languages. Or that there is no price to pay. Quite the
contrary. Having
as many as twenty or so official EU languages will create several
administrative problems that need to be overcome through careful organisation.
There will also be practical difficulties that need to be ironed out. For
instance, is there anyone who can translate Maltese into Slovene or Estonian
into Maltese? Although, Maltese are known to be found everywhere, such people
are likely to be scarce. As a result, new formulas
will need to be found, for instance by using relay languages. This means that
Maltese would be translated into English and then from English to the other
languages � and vice versa. And it is also quite
costly. The EU employs more translators than any other organisation in the
world. Currently, the official languages cost the EU budget around two euros
(EUR2) per person. This bill will clearly grow after enlargement. Costs cover the recruitment
of translators from each new country to work on translation of documents and
simultaneous interpretation during conferences. In a recent document, the
Commission estimated that for each new official language, the EU will need 110
extra staff for translation and 40 new interpreters, between permanent and
free-lance staff. That also applies for the Maltese language and these recruits
will clearly need to be Maltese. In
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