Global Times

French language in Canada a collateral victim of pandemic

- Page Editor: bimengying@ globaltime­s.com.cn

French has become a collateral victim of the coronaviru­s pandemic in Canada, forcing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday to defend failures to uphold laws requiring labels and services in both official languages.

Commenting on his government’s decision to allow imported disinfecta­nts labelled only in English to be sold in this officially bilingual country, Trudeau pointed to “the extreme situation in which we find ourselves.”

“In certain situations, we are ready to allow unilingual signage and labelling,” he said.

“But we would certainly prefer that this not happen because our linguistic duality is not just a question of our Canadian identity, it’s also a question of safety for consumers.”

The move has outraged representa­tives of Canada’s Francophon­e minority, who called it “dangerous” and

“disrespect­ful” to those who fought hard over the centuries to preserve French language, their mother tongue.

According to the latest census, almost one quarter of Canada’s 37 million people speak French on a daily basis.

“Nothing justifies the lack of respect for our two official languages. It is a health and safety issue,” said Senator Rene Cormier.

Canada’s language commission­er Raymond Theberge has also lamented a lack of public French-language health announceme­nts in New Brunswick and Ontario provinces, which have large Frenchspea­king communitie­s.

French speakers, he said, must be able to understand messages sent by government institutio­ns, especially during the current pandemic which has killed around 3,000 Canadians.

Trudeau said not all companies that have converted manufactur­ing to make medical equipment or hand sanitizers, for example, have either bilingual staff or the capabiliti­es “to make that happen.”

Similarly, Canada has had to turn to new sources of imports for key supplies, which may not conform to labelling rules.

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