China says 85% of its citizens will use Mandarin by 2025 - Los Angeles Times
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China says 85% of its people will use Mandarin by 2025, in a blow to dialects like Cantonese

Tibetan Buddhist nuns reading from Chinese-language textbooks
Tibetan Buddhist nuns read from textbooks teaching the Chinese language at a college near Lhasa, the capital of Tibet.
(Mark Schiefelbein / Associated Press)
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China is launching an aggressive campaign to promote Mandarin, saying that 85% of its citizens will use the national language by 2025.

The move appears to put threatened Chinese regional dialects such as Cantonese and Hokkien under even greater pressure, along with minority languages such as Tibetan, Mongolian and Uyghur.

The order issued Tuesday by the State Council, China’s Cabinet, said use of Mandarin, known in Chinese as “putonghua†or the “common tongue,†remains “unbalanced and inadequate†and needs to be improved to meet the demands of the modern economy.

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Critics have sporadically protested changes to the education system and employment requirements that have steadily eroded the role of minority languages, calling it a campaign to eradicate cultures that don’t conform to that of the dominant Han ethnic group.

Along with the 2025 goal, the policy aims to make Mandarin virtually universal in China by 2035, including in rural areas and among ethnic minorities.

The promotion of Mandarin over other languages has sparked occasional protests, including last year in the Inner Mongolia region, when the Mongolian language was replaced by Mandarin as the language of instruction.

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The secret detentions of young feminists and labor activists underscore the impunity with which Beijing disappears those deemed a ‘stability’ threat.

China’s ruling Communist Party has denounced all such movements as a form of separatism and repressed them ruthlessly. It says language conformity is necessary for the sake of the economy and national unity.

The policy is backed up by legal requirements, and the document issued Wednesday demanded strengthened supervision to “ensure that the national common spoken and written language is used as the official language of government agencies and used as the basic language of schools, news and publications, radio, film and television, public services and other fields.â€

It also calls on officials to “vigorously enhance the international status and influence of Chinese†in academia, international organizations and at global gatherings.

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Government attempts to promote Mandarin through its worldwide network of Confucius Institutes have been controversial, with critics denouncing them as an attempt to promote the party’s agenda and quash discussion of such topics as its human rights record.

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