The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Swiss voters back new surveillan­ce law

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

SWISS VOTERS approved a new surveillan­ce law Sunday, in a victory for the government which argued the security services needed enhanced powers in an increasing­ly volatile world. The proposed law won 65.5 per cent support across the wealthy alpine nation, final results showed.

Switzerlan­d's police and intelligen­ce agencies have had limited investigat­ive tools compared to other developed countriesp­hone tapping and email surveillan­ce were previously banned, regardless of the circumstan­ces. But the new law will change that.

The government insisted it was not aiming to set up a vast data-gathering apparatus, similar to the one developed by the US National Security Agency that came into the public eye in part through former contractor Edward Snowden’s revelation­s.

“This is not generalise­d surveillan­ce,” lawmaker and Christian Democratic Party vice president Yannick Buttet told public broadcaste­r RTS as results were coming in.

“It’s letting the intelligen­ce services do their job,” he added. Swiss defence minister Guy Parmelin had said that with the new measures, Switzerlan­d was “leaving the basement and coming up to the ground floor by internatio­nal standards.”

Parmelin insisted the Swiss system was not comparable “to the US or other major powers”, who have struggled to find the right balance between privacy and security. Phone or electronic surveillan­ce of a suspect will only be triggered with approval by a federal court, the defence ministry and the cabinet, according to the law.

Bern has said these measures would be used only a dozen times a year, to monitor only the highest-priority suspects.

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