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Last Updated: Monday, 9 February, 2004, 13:47 GMT
Sit-down protest disrupts traffic
Student protest
Students succeeded in blocking traffic entering the university
Students in Aberystwyth stepped up their campaign for improved Welsh language provision by stopping traffic from entering the university campus for most of Monday

More than 100 members of Welsh language student union - UMCA - staged a sit down protest across the main entrance to University of Wales Aberystwyth, disrupting rush-hour traffic.

The protest was over what students claim is a lack of Welsh language education provision.

But Welsh Education Minister Jane Davidson has previously said that �1.23m for Welsh medium provision had gone to institutions this year.

Students will not give up until there has been a fundamental change.
Osian Rhys, Student Guild

"It's about time the University shows its support for a Welsh-language federal college." said Catrin Dafydd, President of UMCA.

"This is the only answer that will give the Welsh language stability in the higher education sector.

Unfair treatment

"It is vital that funding is allocated for postgraduate courses through the medium of Welsh, to ensure a supply of lecturers in the future."

Students claim a lack of Welsh speaking administrative staff should be addressed by the university.

They also claim that posters, general correspondence and adverts are either monolingual or have English put on top of Welsh.

"At the moment, Welsh-speaking students are being treated unfairly," said Osian Rhys, Welsh language officer at the student guild.

"Education through the medium of Welsh here is very patchy and is minute in comparison to what is available in English.

Student protest
Demonstrators are unhappy about the status of the Welsh language

"Even this bare provision is often dependent upon a few individuals who are willing to make an extra effort to provide it.

"Students will not give up until there has been a fundamental change.

Students claim the Welsh language must be given a central place in the higher education sector, and a Welsh-language federal college is the only solution.

A University of Wales spokesman said the institution had no comment to make.




SEE ALSO:
Students rally against top-up fees
27 Oct 03  |  Education
Top-up fee rebels 'to fight on'
28 Jan 04  |  Politics


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