Off the wire
Enhanced inspection ordered following fatal food poisoning incidents  • Nagoya mayor should "kneel and apologize" for Nanjing Massacre: FM  • China reiterates no restrictions on foreign firms' profit transfers  • Indonesian economy to face indirect impacts from "Trump effect": observers  • Urgent: HK to return detained military vehicles to Singapore -- customs  • 3nd LD: British Supreme Court rules Parliament must be given vote on Brexit  • China pumps 245.5 bln liquidity into market via MLF  • Zambia to undertake study on cost of producing electricity  • Zambia launches fund to boost non-traditional exports  • 2 killed in car bomb attack in downtown Baghdad  
You are here:   Home

Spain's ministers criticize White House over removing Spanish version of website

Xinhua, January 24, 2017 Adjust font size:

Spanish government ministers criticized the removal on Monday of the Spanish language version of the official White House website (www.whitehouse.gov) days after Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th U.S. President.

The Spanish version was replaced by a message "Sorry the page you're looking for can't be found" on Monday to the surprise of the 50 million Spanish speakers in the United States and the 700 million Spanish speakers worldwide.

Spanish Minister for Education, Culture and Sports Inigo Mendez de Vigo said the Whited House move was "not good news," while insisting it would "neither detain nor threaten the unstoppable diffusion" of the Spanish language.

"The knowledge and use of different languages in society is something that strengthens a country and shows its cultural riches," he added.

Foreign Minister Alfonso Dastis Quecedo said although the decision was an "internal" question for the U.S., it was one which "didn't seem to be a good idea" and which he lamented.

Justice Minister Rafael Catala said the decision "made no sense," adding that the Spanish government was watching events in the United States with "a certain disquiet."

Susana Diaz, leader of the main opposition Socialist Party in Andalusia, described the White House move as "an insult to the Hispanic community and an intolerable attack on the second language in the U.S."

In the academic world, Victor Garcia de la Concha, director of the Cervantes Institute, said the White House decision was "serious," saying that U.S. President Donald Trump was "rowing against the tide" concerning an increasing use of the Spanish language.

"We are not going to stop, we are going to continue," he added. Endi