
-
Macron urges new era of Anglo-French unity in address to UK parliament
-
Anisimova into first Wimbledon semi-final as former teen star returns to spotlight
-
Trump accuses Putin of talking 'bullshit' on Ukraine
-
Sri Lanka crush Bangladesh by 99 runs to seal ODI series
-
England ignoring threat of Euros exit ahead of Dutch showdown: Wiegman
-
'Big adrenalin' propels Pogacar to Tour stage and 100th career win
-
Fritz reaches Wimbledon semis despite fresh line call blunder, Sabalenka advances
-
Pogacar wins Tour de France stage four for career century
-
Trump faces MAGA meltdown over Epstein reversal
-
Kisses, handshakes: British royals host friendly state visit for French president
-
Sabalenka battles back to reach Wimbledon semis
-
Sinner cancels Wimbledon practice hit after elbow injury
-
France wildfire shuts down Marseille airport
-
Thousands told to stay home as Spain forest fire rages
-
Trump says 'no extensions' to Aug 1 tariff deadline
-
Wimbledon line technology fails again as Fritz reaches semis
-
Rubio imposter used AI to message high-level officials: report
-
Kyiv, Moscow residents baffled by Trump's wavers on Ukraine aid
-
Archer can help England rattle impressive India, says Broad
-
Iconic Bayeux Tapestry to be loaned to Britain: French president
-
Lyles to make 200m return against Tebogo in Monaco
-
UK post office scandal may have caused 13 suicides: inquiry
-
Some Europeans still travel to Iran, ignoring dire warnings
-
ICC seeks arrest of Taliban leaders over persecution of women
-
Stocks mark time as Trump postpones tariffs deadline
-
India expect England's Archer to pose 'challenge'
-
Springboks make 11 changes for Italy Test
-
Liverpool return to training in wake of Jota death
-
France's Marseille airport says closing due to nearby wildfire
-
France's Macron kicks off 'historic' UK state visit
-
Aussie prop Tupou hopes Racing move will bring smile back
-
Speeding likely cause of Diogo Jota car crash: police
-
Bulgaria becomes 21st member to adopt euro after EU green light
-
'Free culture': Slovak gunman defends Fico shooting as trial begins
-
Rome to host Ukraine recovery conference as US support falters
-
Qatar says 'we will need time' for Gaza ceasefire
-
Alcaraz faces Norrie test at Wimbledon, Sabalenka eyes semi-finals
-
Forest fire blazes in southern France
-
Indian villagers beat five to death for 'witchcraft'
-
Gaza ceasefire talks resume as Trump upbeat on deal
-
Stocks rise as Trump delays tariffs deadline
-
Acropolis shuts, outdoor work halted as heatwave scorches Greece
-
Newcastle agree £55m fee for Forest's Elanga - reports
-
German exports to US tumble as Berlin urges quick trade deal
-
Tottenham sign Japan defender Takai
-
Cambodian garment workers fret Trump's new tariff threat
-
Israel-Hamas ceasefire negotiations resume as Trump pushes for deal
-
Trial of Slovak gunman who shot PM begins
-
Wallabies' Lolesio faces long rehab after surgery
-
Lions not invincible says former All Blacks coach Foster

Iceland wants immigrants to learn the language
In Iceland's parliament, six cleaners take a break from their duties to spend time learning Icelandic, seen as one of the principal barriers to integration in the country.
Of the roughly 400,000 residents of Iceland, about one in five have an immigrant background and few of them speak Icelandic, which experts say could affect social cohesion.
Six years ago, Kanyamon Juisikaew, 46, moved to Reykjavik from Thailand and married an Icelander, and now works as a cleaner in parliament.
"I would like to communicate with Icelandic people when they speak, and in my family because we are an Icelandic family," Juisikaew told AFP in English.
She also said she was disappointed not to be able to follow along during meetings at work.
She has just started taking classes during her regular working hours -- an opportunity provided by a handful of companies and institutions in the Subarctic nation.
Alongside her, colleague Carolina Rivas hopes the classes will help her develop her career.
"It's really good to get to use working time to learn because this language really require a lot of time to learn," Rivas said, adding that it was difficult to find the time to learn when off the clock.
- Overqualified -
Among OECD countries, Iceland has seen the sharpest rise in the share of immigrants in its population, going from three percent in the early 2000s to 20 percent last year.
The Nordic country opened up for migrants in the 2000s to cope with a boom in tourism and a labour shortage for low-paid service jobs.
But a recent report from the OECD, which advises industrialised nations on policy matters, said immigration increases have not been accompanied by sufficiently inclusive public policies.
"Where does Iceland want to be in the future? One cannot afford having 20 percent of the population not speaking the language. So this is really becoming an issue of social cohesion for Iceland," Thomas Liebig, a senior administrator at the OECD's International Migration Division, told AFP.
Coming mainly from the European Economic Area (EEA), immigrants to Iceland do relatively well and enjoy the highest employment rate in the OECD.
But the labour market suffers from over-qualification as language presents a hurdle to job opportunities matching their skills.
At the Mimir training institute in Reykjavik, students flock to take the Icelandic language exam in order to obtain Icelandic citizenship, and language classes are overflowing.
"We see an annual increase every year around 20 percent," Joanna Dominiczak, director of the Icelandic language programmes at Mimir, told AFP.
Dominiczak added that they also had to stop offering classes in September as their funding for the year had run out.
The OECD has also criticised Iceland for providing minimal public funding for language training, and reserving fully subsidised courses for refugees and the unemployed.
- 'Inferiority complex' -
Kronan, one of Iceland's largest supermarket chains, has a workforce where 25 percent are immigrants.
This presents a challenge for HR director Asta Baerings, who recognises that it is difficult to teach Icelandic to new arrivals who are not sure of staying in the country.
Baerings says the core issue is "communication."
"We are trying to make more languages available for employees," Baerings told AFP.
The company has set up a communication portal for employees in Icelandic, English and Polish -- which make up 10 percent of staff.
"But next year we are going to be offering over 30 languages," Baerings said, explaining this is meant to help the 47 nationalities working in their shops.
Anthony John Saunders started working for Kronan when he moved to Iceland from England after Brexit and has become an assistant manager of one of the stores.
"I think being a fluent English speaker, Iceland was quite easy to integrate in because everybody speaks very good English," Saunders said.
He speaks very little Icelandic but hopes to make progress with a customisable app offered by Kronan, which he has just installed.
But Icelanders' grasp of English can be a double-edged sword as immigrants have fewer opportunities to practise what they have learned.
"It also relates to the way we Icelanders perceive our own language," Yrsa Tholl Gylfadottir, a writer and Icelandic teacher, told AFP.
"Some of us have like an inferiority complex, and a disbelief that anyone would want to learn our language or would be able to," she said.
"So Icelanders often resort to English when they speak to people with an accent."
P.Silva--AMWN