Albanian Greeks seek official language

Published: Aug. 19, 2008 at 9:53 AM

TIRANA, Albania, Aug. 19 (UPI) -- A Greek minority group in Albania has petitioned the government to declare Greek a second official language in the country, local reports said.

The group called Omonia sent the request to Prime Minister Sali Berisha in Tirana, noting that neighboring Macedonia had already declared Albanian its second official language, Macedonian Radio & TV reported Tuesday.

Albania's Koha Jone newspaper said the group contends such a move would show Albania is respecting various minority rights conventions it has signed.

While there has been no official response from the Albanian government, the newspaper quoted an anonymous source as saying the population numbers don't make it feasible. The official noted 40 percent of Macedonians speak Albanian, while in Albania, only 4 percent of the population speak Greek.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints




Additional News Stories
Police seek screwdriver-wielding thief (1 min)
Dixon: 'Pitt to Big Ten a mistake' (11 min)
UPI NewsTrack Health and Science News
Pa. Capitol cafeteria closed due to mice
UPI NewsTrack Business
CDC: 11 states have widespread H1N1
Crude oil prices rebound
fark
OOOooo-klahoma, where your rights go mainly down the drain
Zombie-proof baby turns one
Phone smashing cow is finally brought to justice... (with cow attack video goodness)
Study finds 1 in 110 children has autism study finds
A tasty tragedy, 60 cows are killed in barn fire. Accidental BBQ trifecta now in play
Website of highly repected, Pulitzer-winning newspaper based in a major metropolitian area publishes...