Metinė prenumerata tik 6,99 Eur. Juodai geras pasiūlymas
Išbandyti
2013 02 11

Poles threaten to leave Lithuania's ruling coalition over education law

The Electoral Action of Poles (LLRA) has threatened to end its participation in the ruling coalition, should the government reject the idea of simplified examination in the Lithuanian language for graduates of national minority schools. Meanwhile the ruling Social Democratic Party says it will succumb to no ultimatums.
Valdemaras Tomaševskis
Valdemar Tomaševski / Juliaus Kalinsko / 15min nuotr.

"I am optimistic, we have said it very clearly that we will reconsider our presence in the government, if the government program is not executed. If it is postponed to next year, to 2014, we will think whether it is possible," Valdemar Tomaševski, the leader of the Electoral Action of Poles, told LNK news on Sunday.

In his opinion, six months should be enough to amend the Education Law and stipulate provisions that would be more favorable to national minorities.

"This is not rushing. It is normal to adopt the law in, let's say, July," he added.

Parliamentary Vice-Speaker Algirdas Sysas of the Social Democrats says he is not afraid of the LLRA threats.

"We haven't discussed this in the political group or the group's board. We do not fear ultimatums, there's no need to threaten, especially since some changes – these changes exactly – were envisaged in our program. We will do it anyway. However, Tomaševski probably wants to feel a bit more important," said Sysas.

Education and Science Minister Dainius Pavalkis confirmed to BNS earlier this year that, among other options, a possibility was considered to give different tasks of the Lithuanian-language graduation examination to national minority students than in Lithuanian-language schools, with a more specific discussion scheduled for Monday.

In his words, the discussions would focus on assessment of the examination, the size of the essay and the number of authors national minority students would be expected to cite in their papers.

In spring 2011, the Lithuanian parliament adopted a new version of the Education Law, which, among other things, stipulated a new scheme of the teaching of the Lithuanian language in schools of national minorities, more classes in the Lithuanian language and unification of the tasks of the Lithuanian-language graduation examination starting 2013.

Report mistake

Successfully sent

Thank you

Economy

Lithuanian producers of EPS on the way to circular economy
Gilužio Rivjera by the real estate company Homa – hundreds of apartments and millions in investment
Capitalica fund successfully issued bonds amounting to EUR 5 million to finance the Verde project in Riga

Feature

State Progress Strategy 'Lithuania 2050': will Lithuania become the 'Silicon Valley' of social enterprise?
Citus Experts: Planning to Furbish or Brush Up your Home Interior? Get Ready for a Brutal Run
How do the country's most desirable employers nurture IT talents?

Opinion

Ramūnas Vilpišauskas. The president’s achievements in Brussels were modest
Laurynas Jonavičius. Will the new German government’s foreign policy coincide with Lithuanian interests?
Eastern Partnership ‘beyond westlessness’: a new momentum for the European integration

Politics

Taiwanese Minister Ming-hsin Kung – about Lithuania’s strengths and the two countries’ looming plans
The double standards of “values-based policy”: Lithuania did not join the condemnation of Turkey
Behind the scenes of ambassadorial appointments: Seimas looking for clarification on continuing questioning at the Presidential Palace