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Bill promoting the use of Gaelic is killed in Northern Ireland’s Assembly

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From the Associated Press

Protestants in Northern Ireland’s power-sharing government Tuesday vetoed a Catholic plan to introduce a bill promoting Gaelic.

The little-spoken language is promoted by Northern Ireland’s Catholics to emphasize their Irish identity on this overwhelmingly English-speaking island.

But Culture Minister Edwin Poots, a Protestant, told the Northern Ireland Assembly in Belfast that an Irish Language Act -- an idea proposed by the British and Irish governments in the 2006 peace proposals -- would be expensive and divisive.

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Roman Catholic leaders then accused the Protestant side of reneging on the 2006 proposals.

In Northern Ireland, only Catholic schools teach Gaelic. About 4,000 students go to primarily Gaelic-speaking schools, which Poots said got $23 million in taxpayer funds last year.

The envisioned Irish Language Act would require government agencies and courts to deliver services in Gaelic -- a program Poots said would snowball unpredictably in cost.

He noted that no Catholic lawmaker was prepared to specify what current spending should be cut to fund the project.

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