From the BBC:
“Ryanair Afrikaans test:
Airline stands by South African language quiz”
Irish budget airline Ryanair says
it is still insisting that all South Africans travelling on flights to the UK
must prove their nationality by taking a test in the Afrikaans language. The
policy has caused outrage in South Africa, where many black people associate
Afrikaans with the days of white-minority rule. South Africa has 11 official
languages and Ryanair has not explained why it chose Afrikaans. The airline
runs flights around Europe.
In a statement to the BBC,
Ryanair said it had to carry out the extra test because of "substantially
increased cases of fraudulent South African passports being used to enter the
UK". Any airline found to have taken a passenger to the UK on a fake
passport faces a fine of £2,000 ($2,500) from the UK authorities. "This is
why Ryanair must ensure that all passengers (especially South African citizens)
travel on a valid SA passport/visa as required by UK Immigration," the
airline said. The British government says it does not require the extra test to
be carried out. As well as not explaining why it chose Afrikaans rather than
any other South African language, Ryanair did not say whether it carried out
similar tests for any other nationality.
Only around 13% of South Africans
speak Afrikaans as a first language, according to a 2011 census - making it the
country's third-most spoken mother tongue, after Zulu and IsiXhosa. The quiz
contains questions such as what is South Africa's international dialling code,
what is its capital city and who is the current president of the country. Anyone
who fails is refused travel and refunded the cost of their ticket. South
African citizen Dinesh Joseph told the BBC how he was "seething" with
anger when asked to take the test when flying to the UK from the Canary
Islands. "It was the language of apartheid," Mr Joseph told the BBC,
saying it was a trigger for him. "Being a person of colour, especially from
South Africa, you've experienced a lot... of racism," he said. The
imposition of Afrikaans in schools was the main reason behind the 1976 Soweto
Uprising against the apartheid regime, in which at least 170 people were
killed, mostly schoolchildren. BBC South African reporter Nomsa Maseko says she
swore never to speak Afrikaans after leaving school, and that she would have
failed the test. South Africa has 11 official languages: Zulu, isiXhosa,
Afrikaans, Sepedi, Setswana, English, Sesotho, Xitsonga, Siswati, Tshivenda and
Ndebele.
Why Afrikaans is so
controversial? During apartheid, or white-minority rule, Afrikaans was made
mandatory, and an official language of education, alongside English, prompting
nationwide protests by black South Africans It is no longer obligatory
but is an option in schools It is the mother tongue of only 13% of South
Africans, mainly mixed-race people, known as coloureds, and white South
Africans - the descendants of Dutch, German and French settlers who arrived in
the 17th Century More will be able to understand it but many cannot, and
speak one of the 11 other official languages English is the language
most commonly used officially and in business, according to South Africa's 2011
census.
^ This is clearly just open
discrimination by RyanAir. They are an Irish airline so why don’t they make
every Irish Citizen prove they can speak Gaelic? This is just another reason on
a very long list as to why no one should fly RyanAir. ^
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