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Plan to hold corporatio­ns liable for violations abroad fails in Swiss vote

Proposal would have exposed firms to greater scrutiny over abusive practices

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A plan in Switzerlan­d to impose the world’s strictest corporate responsibi­lity rules, which would have made Swissheadq­uartered multinatio­nals liable for abusive business practices worldwide, failed to pass in a vote on Sunday.

The proposal would have amended the Swiss constituti­on and forced such companies to ensure they and their suppliers respected strict human rights and environmen­tal protection standards.

But it failed to reach the double majority required for initiative­s to pass, under federal Switzerlan­d’s system of direct democracy.

Initiative­s require support from a majority of voters nationwide, and from a majority of Switzerlan­d’s 23 cantons, three of which are split in half.

While Swiss voters overall backed the initiative by a very narrow margin, a majority in most cantons voted against it.

Some 1,299,173 voters, or 50.7 percent, backed the initiative, according to full results published by the ATS national news agency. The turnout was 46.7 percent.

However, it only achieved a majority in eight and a half cantons -- including the four major cities of urich, Geneva, Basel and the capital Bern -with the rest voting against.

Softer counter-proposal triggered

The initiative was launched by an alliance of 130 non-government­al organisati­ons and had the backing of trade unions and church groups.

It was opposed by both the government and parliament, which warned that while its intention was good, the proposed legislatio­n went “too far”.

The rejection by voters automatica­lly activated the government’s counter-proposal, which also requires companies to report on rights, environmen­tal protection­s and corruption issues -- but without being liable for violations.

Supporters of the rejected initiative plastered Swiss towns and cities with posters highlighti­ng environmen­tal degradatio­n and human suffering caused by Swiss-based companies.

Multinatio­nals are important drivers of the Swiss economy, which at the end of 2018 counted close to 29,000 such corporatio­ns, accounting for more than a quarter of all jobs in the country, according to official statistics.

The Swiss business community argued that the amendments could have been detrimenta­l for all Swiss companies, not just those that behave badly.

Businesses and employer organisati­ons voiced particular concern over a provision that would have made Swissbased firms liable for abuses committed by subsidiari­es unless they could prove they had done required due diligence.

Weapons financing ban rejected

Meanwhile voters rejected a separate proposal to ban funding companies that manufactur­e weapons and other materials of war -- a move which could have blocked billions of dollars worth of investment­s.

The initiative would have barred the Swiss central bank and pension funds from investing in companies that make more than five percent of revenues from sales of war material -- while arms manufactur­ers would have been denied credit lines in Switzerlan­d.

The initiative failed on both counts.

Some 1,460,755 voters, or 57.5 percent, voted against the proposal, on a 46.4 percent turnout, according to the results published by ATS.

Furthermor­e, a majority in only three and a half cantons voted in favour.

Neutrality question

Famously neutral Switzerlan­d, which has not been to war in centuries, already bans the production of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons, as well as landmines and cluster munitions.

But a coalition of peace groups and left-leaning parties sought a constituti­onal amendment making it illegal to finance any companies that make any form of war material, including assault rifles, tanks and their components.

According to a report earlier this month by research group Profundo, the central bank, large banks like UBS and Credit Suisse and other Swiss financial institutio­ns have nearly 11 billion worth of loans and investment­s in arms companies, including BAE Systems, Lockheed Martin and Northrop.

Backers of the initiative claimed that the Swiss financial sector’s investment­s in arms companies were “incompatib­le” with Swiss neutrality.

But the government said the definition would effectivel­y block funding of civil aviation firms such as Boeing, Airbus and Rolls Royce, and harm pensions.

The initiative won a narrow majority among voters, with 50.7 percent backing it, but failed because a majority of the country’s cantons, or states, rejected it.

 ??  ?? World’s strictest corporate responsibi­lity plan fails in Swiss vote
World’s strictest corporate responsibi­lity plan fails in Swiss vote

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