BBC News By Robbie Meredith Published are "not comprehensive enough". That is according to a new Council of Europe (CoE) report which is critical of how the UK is meeting its responsibilities to promote Irish. The CoE Committee of Experts said there were no provisions for public road or street signs in Irish in NDNA. The council is a human rights organisation founded in 1949 with 47 member states. The CoE monitors how the UK is meeting its responsibilities to protect and promote minority languages and their use in public life. "Even once the measures contained in the January 2020 agreement are enacted, there remains a need for a comprehensive Irish language act," the committee said.