2006年VOA标准英语-Code of Conduct for Immigrants Leads to Te(在线收听) |
By Nina Marie Potts
--------------------------------------------------- In the Netherlands, many Dutch thought they'd built one of the world's most tolerant multicultural societies. But a string of confrontations between native Dutch and immigrants has put that all in doubt. Rotterdam, like many European port cities, is a melting pot -- some predict its immigrant population will be nearly 60 per cent by 2017 -- not a figure "Liveable Rotterdam," Rotterdam's ruling right-wing party, wants to live with. Swept to power four years ago, on a tide of anti-immigration feeling, the party believes anyone with a criminal record, insufficient income or a poor grasp of Dutch should be kept out of the city. The city council has approved a code of conduct for all residents.
"Acceptable normal behavior" is what has Rotterdam's residents divided. The code's critics say apparently liberal ideas, like respect for homosexuals, or the rejection of extremism, cleverly mask what is essentially a racist, discriminatory creed. "How can you implement it? Since I'm born, when I get hurt, what do I say? ‘Manoula mou, my mother?’ And I say it in Greek because I was born this way, it comes automatically, says Mr. Nicolakos. “I speak four languages, but Greek comes above. Is that forbidden? Is it forbidden for a Muslim to say 'Allah?' ‘Mon dieu?’ Can you forbid that?" Whether or not the code forcing people to speak Dutch in the streets is legal under EU law is unclear. But Holland's immigration minister, Rita Verdoonk, who recently called for a similar code to be introduced nationwide, insists there will be no law, and no language police. So how can the Code of Conduct be implemented? It's a question Rotterdam's politicians seem reluctant to answer. "You can show something to people,” says Marco Pastors, “and say, ‘If you want to have a nice life here, and you don't know how to do that, and you don't know exactly what behavior is accepted here, and here it is, and if you don't like it, we have to have a little talk’." Exactly what that "little talk" will entail, no one seems to know. The Rotterdam Code of Conduct is the first of its kind, but with immigrant tensions rising across Europe, it might not be the last. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/2/30905.html |