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Russia Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov recently doubled down on an inaccurate statement he’s made before: that Ukraine banned the Russian language. During a press conference on June 6, Lavrov said Ukraine adopted laws banning the Russian language, claiming the Russian language was prohibited in education, the media, everyday contacts, etc. Lavrov mentioned that if English had been banned in Ireland or French in Belgium, Europe would have responded differently. But Lavrov is mischaracterizing a Ukrainian language law. It does not ban Russian from the country. In April 2019 , Ukraine’s parliament approved a language law making Ukrainian the mandatory language for public sector workers. The adoption of this law required citizens to know Ukrainian and obliged civil servants, soldiers, doctors and teachers to communicate in Ukrainian. Some exceptions were made under the law for some minority languages like English and other European Union languages. The Russian language does not fall under this category. In January 2022, a new provision of the law was introduced, under which print media outlets registered in Ukraine were required to publish in Ukrainian. This did not ban publications in other languages. Instead, the law required that all content also be published in Ukrainian. Again, exceptions under the provision were made for certain languages like English and other official European Union languages, but not Russian. There have been concerns over whether the protections for minority languages under the law are sufficient. An advisory body of the Council of Europe, focusing on constitutional law, published a report in 2019 on the Ukrainian language law. It is the fourth Ukrainian language policy the commission has assessed over the years. In the report, the commission notes the need for Ukraine to adopt measures to promote the use of Ukrainian as the State language, because of its history. However, it also explains that the policy does not balance strengthening Ukrainian with implementing enough protections for minority languages in the country, like Russian. According to the Washington Post , about 50% of Ukrainians speak Ukrainian at home, and around 30% speak Russian primarily. Ukraine’s language law , which has been implemented in phases, establishes Ukrainian as the country’s sole state language. The law requires Ukrainian to be primarily used in business, school and media settings. However, it does not ban the use of Russian or other languages. Our ruling Lavrov referenced the banning and prohibition of Russian in Ukraine, particularly in education, the media, everyday contacts, during a press conference. Despite a language law that establishes Ukrainian as the country’s official language and prioritizes its use in civil society, Russian has not been banned. We rate Lavrov’s statement False.
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