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February 20 2012
Bangladesh bans ‘Banglish’ to protect local tongue
A Bangladesh court has outlawed the use of English slang known as
“Banglish” on television and radio stations, a move welcomed by experts
who worry about a foreign invasion of their language. The High Court
issued the order on Thursday “to uphold the sanctity of our mother
tongue” and stop the “rape” of Bengali and its 1,000-year past, a state
prosecutor said.
The history of Bengali, which is spoken by at least 250 million people
on the subcontinent, is wrapped up with the creation of Bangladesh as a
country in 1971. Dozens of private television stations and radio stations that feature
music and talk-shows directed at teenagers and people in their twenties
have sprouted in Bangladesh over the last five or six years. Use of
“Banglish” in which Bengali and English words are mixed seamlessly
together is widespread, as is “Hinglish” in India - a combination of
Hindi and English. “The court has ordered them not to use words which are foreign to our
language,” deputy attorney general Altaf Hossain told AFP. “It asked
them not to broadcast or anchor programmes using distorted Bengali
language or pronounce Bengali words in a distorted form,” he said. The
court said this distortion of the language was tantamount to “rape”,
Hossain said, adding it had also ordered a committee to be set up to
oversee how the language should be used by broadcasters.
