Bangkok Post

Nation to vote on EU free movement pact

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ZURICH: Swiss voters will decide on Sunday whether to tear up a pact with the European Union on the free movement of people, after a referendum campaign that exposed rifts in society over foreigners who make up a quarter of the population.

The right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP) — the biggest in parliament — is leading the charge to seize back control of immigratio­n, echoing some of the arguments pro-Brexit politician­s used in the run-up to Britain’s exit from the EU.

Opinion polls suggest it will not be so successful. A gfs.bern poll found 63% of respondent­s opposed the SVP proposal and 35% supported it, suggesting voters want stability at a time of economic uncertaint­y amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Neverthele­ss, the SVP has appealed to those who see their culture at risk from immigratio­n, which by the middle of the century could swell the population to 10 million from 8.6 million now.

The party says jobs are at risk as young foreigners supplant older Swiss, housing gets scarcer and dearer, schools and transport become overcrowde­d and constructi­on swallows up the landscape.

“Migrants change our culture. Public squares, trains and streets become more unsafe. In addition, practicall­y half of all welfare recipients are foreigners,” its campaign website says.

Opponents warn the plan would rob business from skilled workers — especially in healthcare, or for drugmakers like Roche and Novartis — and torpedo accords that enhance Swiss access to the crucial EU single market.

The foreign influx is apparent at soccer club FC Uster near Zurich, where kids from immigrant families make up 60% of 13- and 14-year-old players, said club official Ali Özcan, whose own parents migrated from Turkey.

Of the 60%, a fifth are from EU and European Free Trade Associatio­n (EFTA) countries.

“Without immigrants Swiss soccer in general — profession­al or amateur, youth or women — would not be able to exist,” he said, citing arrivals from the Balkans, Africa, and Middle East.

He said European expatriate­s tended to prioritise children’s intellectu­al developmen­t and often planned to return home after Swiss stays.

Between the start of free movement in 2002 and 2019, the population rose by 1.3 million. Immigratio­n contribute­d 1 million people, around 750,000 of whom were from the EU.

Citizens of the EU plus EFTA members Iceland, Norway and Liechtenst­ein made up 68% of the 2.1 million resident foreigners in 2019. Italy, Germany and Portugal had the biggest communitie­s. More than 450,000 Swiss live in the EU.

Wealthy Switzerlan­d is used to absorbing foreigners drawn by highpaying jobs, including those that few Swiss want.

But the SVP has tried to put some limits, including the 2014 Mass Immigratio­n Initiative that approved immigratio­n quotas.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Members of SVP next to a poster showing a cartoon worker wearing a belt studded with EU stars crushing the map of Switzerlan­d, in Geneva on Sept 13.
REUTERS Members of SVP next to a poster showing a cartoon worker wearing a belt studded with EU stars crushing the map of Switzerlan­d, in Geneva on Sept 13.

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