Here's a link about the new English language requirements for aviation as 
explained by the Australian Government Civil Aviation Safety Authority:

http://www.casa.gov.au/fcl/language/index.htm

And below is a news report I found from last June claiming that many Chinese 
pilots will be grounded if they cannot meet the requirements or get tested. The 
new rules come into effect today.

As I mentioned in my last email, I couldn't help daydream about the ICAO doing 
something similar for using metric everywhere. 

Ah, well .... perhaps someday!

Ezra


====================
NEW ENGLISHI LANGUAGE RULES TO GROUND THOUSANDS OF CHINESE PILOTS
June 22, 2007

Xinhua News Agency said the rules, approved by the International Civil Aviation 
Organization in 2006, require all airline pilots who fly overseas to pass an 
English-language competency test by March 2008..

Tough new rules on English language standards could ground thousands of Chinese 
commercial airline pilots, state media reported Friday.

Xinhua News Agency said the rules, approved by the International Civil Aviation 
Organization in 2006, require all airline pilots who fly overseas to pass an 
English-language competency test by March 2008 - just months before the start 
of the Beijing Summer Olympics in August that year.

"A considerable number of Chinese pilots are ex-military who speak little or 
even no English,'' Xinhua said.

About 8,600 of China's 14,000 pilots fly on international air routes and must 
meet the new standard, Xinhua quoted sources with the General Administration of 
Civil Aviation as saying.

It quoted senior CAAC official Chen Guangcheng as saying that of the more than 
700 pilots who took the test in the first half of 2007, more than 600 passed. 
But that leaves close to 8,000 pilots still grappling with The Test of English 
for Aviation.

Xinhua said airlines such as China Southern Airlines tackled the problem by 
making all its pilots take English courses for six straight days each month. 
But the test includes a written exam and a face-to-face interview, and Xinhua 
said there may not be enough interviewers - who must know English and Chinese 
and be familiar with civil aviation - to carry out all the tests needed.
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