38
"RELATING TO CERTAIN ASPECTS OF THE LAWS ON THE USE OF LANGUAGES
IN EDUCATION IN BELGIUM" v. BELGIUM (MERITS) JUDGMENT
"entitled to refrain from positive action to meet the wishes of the Frenchspeaking population", the Commission questions "the result of a policy
which thwarts them by measures of compulsion and by penalties". Is not
such a policy in danger of "producing wrongs similar to those" which
existed in the past, but "with the difference that this time it is the Frenchspeaking population which would suffer"? "In any event" a reading of the
documents shows "clearly, in the view of the majority of the Commission,
the intention of the Belgian Government and of the Belgian legislature to
place the French speaking population in the Flemish region at a
disadvantage in relation to the Dutch-speaking inhabitants"; the 1932
legislation created "numerous inequalities which have been markedly
aggravated by the 1963 legislation to the detriment of the former and the
benefit of the latter".
In the opinion of the Commission, the inequalities derived from the laws
on the use of languages in education in the unilingual regions do not
however constitute discrimination contrary to Article 14 (art. 14). Despite
the fact that the Belgian Government has not shown the necessity for "these
inequalities and disadvantages", that "a double system of education, both
Dutch and French", would certainly be sufficient to remove the wrongs
which existed in the past, that unilingualism is not based on "financial,
technical or administrative" requirements, and that no account is taken of
the "number or degree of French-speaking persons" living in Flanders, five
members of the Commission "hesitate to consider" the system
"discriminatory". They recall that the Convention and the Protocol do not
oblige States to establish or to subsidise any education at all; from this they
infer that the Belgian State, "in encouraging education in Dutch" and
"discouraging education in French" grants "a privilege" to the Flemishspeaking inhabitants without inflicting "hardships" on French-speaking
inhabitants. They add that the Contracting States "are generally content to
provide or give support to education in their national language" and to
throw it open to "all their inhabitants" on equal conditions; the Belgian State
has not departed from this rule "of international conduct": "it has simply
adapted it, certainly in a summary manner, to the fact that there are several
linguistic groups in Belgium". This being so, the five members concerned
"do not feel it necessary to dwell on criticisms made by the Applicants of
certain matters of detail in the legislation", for example the rule relating to
the teaching of the second national language: if "the State’s refusal to
establish or subsidise schools" does not constitute a discrimination "it
necessarily follows that the State enjoys a (...) margin of discretion with
regard to the organisation of curricula in official or subsidised education".
Four other members also arrive, although for different reasons, at the
conclusion that the system of language regulation in education in the
unilingual regions is "not incompatible with the Convention". On the other
hand, three members of the Commission do not accept this conclusion.