The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Swiss firms narrowly avoid Responsibl­e Business liability

- BRENNA HUGHES NEGHAIWI

ZURICH — Swiss firms narrowly avoided facing greater liability for human rights and environmen­tal abuses on Sunday after a national vote rejected the proposal due to regional difference­s despite it winning majority popular support.

In a divisive referendum, 50.7 per cent of Swiss voters supported proposals by the Responsibl­e Business Initiative (RBI) to extend liability over internatio­nal human rights abuses and environmen­tal harm caused by major Swiss companies and the firms they control abroad.

But the initiative failed to win support in a majority of cantons, a necessary condition for a public initiative to be enacted in Switzerlan­d, paving the way for a milder government counter-proposal to come into force.

It is the first time in over 60 years a Swiss vote has failed on regional grounds after winning popular support.

"The Federal Council is pleased with the result, but is also aware that many who have fought for years for the initiative are disappoint­ed today," Justice Minister Karin Keller-sutter said at a press conference.

She said the enactment of new government measures meant supporters would not leave the campaign with empty hands.

"The Federal Council is convinced that this is a good way to achieve the common and undisputed goal of better protecting human rights and the environmen­t."

The government proposal will require firms to step up and publicly report checks on their overseas operations and supply chains, hitherto voluntary measures, but stops short of extending liability to Swiss courts.

Proponents of the initiative said its broad public support — a rare, if symbolic, victory for a politicall­y and economical­ly progressiv­e issue in the traditiona­lly staid country - remained cause for sharper scrutiny of multinatio­nals and commoditie­s firms in one of the world's leading commercial centres.

"Human rights is such a fundamenta­l issue. People understand you can't justify human rights violations by economic considerat­ions," Florian Wettstein, a professor for business ethics at the University of St. Gallen and co-organiser of the initiative, told Reuters.

In a polarizing campaign, the government and multinatio­nals denounced the negative economic consequenc­es of the proposal, while activists, religious groups and various political factions argued Switzerlan­d risked falling behind other countries in tackling progressiv­e social and economic issues without it.

"It was the most aggressive campaign I've ever experience­d in my 20 years in politics," parliament­arian Christa Markwalder told Swiss broadcaste­r SRF.

Meanwhile, voters more clearly rejected a proposal seeking to impose a ban on funding arms makers, the latest anti-military referendum in a nation that has not fought an external war for 200 years.

The vote, which held implicatio­ns for major Swiss banks and investors including the country's central bank and pension funds, as well as Swiss industry, received 57.5 per cent rejection.

Organizers said the more than 40 per cent approval gained by the initiative, spanning beyond the country's most left-leaning political camps, nonetheles­s put pressure on arms financing and showed the need for further action.

 ?? ARND WIEGMANN • REUTERS ?? A small banner reading Responsibl­e Business Initiative — Yes on November 29 is fixed to the frame of a bicycle in Zurich.
ARND WIEGMANN • REUTERS A small banner reading Responsibl­e Business Initiative — Yes on November 29 is fixed to the frame of a bicycle in Zurich.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada