Oman Daily Observer

Swiss voters reject more aid for farmers

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ZURICH: Swiss voters decisively rejected more help for farmers in two referendum­s on Sunday, heeding the government’s warnings that the measures would send food prices rocketing and hurt the economy, projection­s for broadcaste­r SRF showed.

Economy Minister Johann Schneider-ammann had called the proposals “dangerous” and said they could trigger tariff increases and other reprisals from trading partners.

One proposal, called the Fair Food initiative, called for all food in Switzerlan­d to come from sustainabl­e sources and for labelling to be more exact. It aimed to improve animal welfare by banning imports of factory-farmed products and ensuring food imports met higher Swiss standards.

Voters were set to reject the measure by a 63-37-per cent margin, projection­s by polling outfit gfs.bern showed. The margin of error was two percentage points.

Supporters such as the Green Party and Social Democrats argued that consumers, animals, the environmen­t and farmers would all benefit.

The other proposal wanted to increase state aid to Swiss farmers, whose numbers have halved since 1985 in a country where three farming businesses close every day.

That was set to fail by a 70-30-per cent margin, the projection­s showed.

Agricultur­e’s contributi­on to the Swiss economy has fallen from 2 per cent in 1985 to under 1 per cent.

The referendum­s were held after farming groups and environmen­talists gathered the more than 100,000 signatures needed to trigger a vote under Switzerlan­d’s system of direct democracy.

The government said the demands would lead to higher subsidies or fixed prices, a claim campaigner­s rejected.

Opinion polls had shown early widespread support for more farm aid was fading as the vote neared and more details about likely costs emerged.

Economy Minister Johann Schneider-ammann had called the proposals “dangerous” and said they could trigger tariff increases and other reprisals from trading partners

 ?? — Reuters ?? Farmers wearing traditiona­l costumes lead their cows during the annual Alpabzug, after leaving their summer mountain pastures at the Schwaegalp mountain pass, in the town of Urnaesch, Switzerlan­d.
— Reuters Farmers wearing traditiona­l costumes lead their cows during the annual Alpabzug, after leaving their summer mountain pastures at the Schwaegalp mountain pass, in the town of Urnaesch, Switzerlan­d.

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