Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2000-10-03-Speech-2-185"

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"Mr President, Commissioner, I too should like to thank and congratulate Mr Brok and the other rapporteurs, but I would mainly like to focus on Slovakia and the policy on minorities, to be more specific. Respect for the cultural identity of a community, even if that community constitutes a minority, increases the self-respect of those who belong to that community, and that self-respect is needed if they want to take their own self-development seriously. This wish for emancipation and self-realisation then motivates people to give something back to the community. This is the philosophy one should adopt when looking at minorities – that would be far more positive. In many enlargement countries, these minorities are labelled as problems. This is the case for the Roma people and others. This is also true of Slovakia. The report – and I am referring to that by Mr Wiersma now – considers a fundamental change of attitude with regard to the Roma to be essential. This says something about the long road ahead, but the Hungarian minority also fears that, despite the 1999 Law on the Use of Minority Languages, it will remain curtailed in its social, cultural and economic development. I come from Belgium, a country where language laws have been unable to solve the problems between the peoples; it takes more than that, education from the top down, including universities. This required more autonomy. I am only referring to this to illustrate that simple solutions do not generally help solve complicated issues. There is no doubt that the diversity of cultures and peoples in Central and Eastern Europe, and in the Balkans, is, within the framework of a unified Europe, being given new opportunities, but at the same time, Europe will also need to realise that a problem such as the Roma, for example, is a problem of a nation without a country and that is our problem too. We cannot simply pass the buck to Slovakia, Romania or the other countries."@en1

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