Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Swiss voters approve tighter gun laws

- JAMEY KEATEN

GENEVA — Swiss voters on Sunday approved a measure to tighten the Alpine nation’s gun laws, bringing the country in line with many of its European partners despite the objections of local gun owners, official results showed.

The Federal Chanceller­y said provisiona­l results showed nearly 64% of voters nationwide agreed to align with European Union firearms rules adopted two years ago after deadly attacks in France, Belgium, Germany and Britain.

The vote was part of Switzerlan­d’s regular referendum­s that give citizens a direct say in policymaki­ng. It had stoked passions in a country with long, proud traditions of gun ownership and sport and target shooting. Switzerlan­d, unlike many other European nations, allows veterans of its obligatory military service for men to take home their service weapons after tours of duty.

The Swiss proposal, among other things, requires regular training on the use of firearms, special waivers to own some semi-automatic weapons, and a serial-number tracking system for key parts of some guns. Gun owners would have to register any weapons not already registered within three years, and keep a registry of their gun collection­s.

Supporters of the measure, including the Swiss parliament and executive branch, said similar measures adopted by the EU after deadly extremist attacks are needed to ensure strong police cooperatio­n and economic ties with Switzerlan­d’s partners in Europe’s Schengen visa-free travel zone. They insisted it will not block law-abiding citizens from obtaining legal guns but would simply do more to track them.

Switzerlan­d is not an EU member, but it is in the Schengen zone that allows for passport-free travel.

Opponents insisted the proposal would violate Switzerlan­d’s Constituti­on and do little to fight extremism or crime. They said the weapons used in recent attacks in Europe weren’t obtained legally. They argued that the proposal cracks down mainly on lawful gun owners in Switzerlan­d.

Jean-Luc Addor, a populist Swiss People’s Party lawmaker from the southweste­rn Valais region, said adopting the EU directive would be “unjust, freedom-killing, useless, dangerous, and above all, anti-Swiss.”

“With no effect on the fight against terrorism, it will only hit honest, law-abiding citizens who possess legal weapons,” he wrote on his website. “It’s the epitome of injustice.”

Carmelo Lagana, project manager for foreign trade at economiesu­isse, the country’s top business federation, insisted that Switzerlan­d would suffer if Swiss police couldn’t continue to have access to Schengen-zone databases. He also said the country had an important say in negotiatio­ns with the European Union.

“It is Switzerlan­d, as a member state, that has participat­ed at every level the work to modify this European directive and it was exactly able to introduce some exceptions to preserve Swiss shooting traditions,” he said. “You should know that the European Union wanted initially to totally forbid the acquisitio­n of semi-automatic weapons, and in the end, we have a directive that doesn’t ban it.”

Switzerlan­d hasn’t faced major extremist attacks like those that have hit France, Belgium, Britain and Germany in recent years, leaving scores dead.

Ahead of the vote, most of Switzerlan­d’s major political parties — except for the populist Swiss People’s Party — favored the measure, with support strongest among Socialists and Greens.

The rift on the issue has fallen along a rural-urban divide, with city dwellers more inclined to back the EU directive.

 ?? AP/PETER SCHNEIDER ?? Werner Salzmann (front, left), Swiss parlamenta­rian of conservati­ve party SVP and a member of the committee against the European Union gun laws and policies, speaks at the committee’s meeting Sunday in Burgdorf, Switzerlan­d.
AP/PETER SCHNEIDER Werner Salzmann (front, left), Swiss parlamenta­rian of conservati­ve party SVP and a member of the committee against the European Union gun laws and policies, speaks at the committee’s meeting Sunday in Burgdorf, Switzerlan­d.

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