The Star Malaysia

Swiss to vote on tightening gun laws with EU ties in the balance

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GENEVA: The Swiss will soon vote on whether to bring the country’s gun laws in line with European Union legislatio­n, with the government warning that a “no” could threaten relations with the bloc.

A demand from the neighbouri­ng EU that Switzerlan­d toughen its gun laws has prompted a rare national debate over firearm ownership in the wealthy Alpine nation, which has a deeply-rooted gun culture.

While the government says the new law is crucial to maintainin­g an array of treaties with the EU, the proposal sparked a fierce pushback from the gun lobby and shooting enthusiast­s, who gathered enough signatures to trigger a vote for this Sunday under Switzerlan­d’s famous direct democratic system.

Brussels changed its own weapons laws two years ago after a wave of deadly terrorist attacks across Europe, slapping bans on certain types of semi-automatic firearms.

Switzerlan­d is not an EU member, but it is bound to the bloc through an array of intricatel­y connected bilateral agreements.

Bern has said a “no” vote would entail Switzerlan­d’s exclusion from the visa-free Schengen travel region and the Dublin accords regulating Europe’s asylum-seeking process.

This would have far-reaching consequenc­es for security, asylum and even tourism, and would cost the country “several billion Swiss francs each year,” it said.

Most of the arguments for changing the law are economic, in a country that has rarely seen the kind of mass shootings that have happened in other countries.

Philippe Miauton of the chamber of commerce and industry in Vaud Canton told the RTS broadcaste­r that turning down the law change could bring “many consequenc­es that would be harmful”.

“Switzerlan­d is not an island ... we need the bilateral deals and that means making concession­s.” — AFP

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