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Anti-racism chief slams SVP asylum seeker plan

The Swiss People’s Party’s idea to intern asylum seekers who break the law has found no favour with the Commission against Racism.

Anti-racism chief slams SVP asylum seeker plan
Swiss Federal Assembly

The government expressed its disdain for the proposal on Monday by stating that such a measure would “not be possible in a state of law.”

“Deprivation of liberty is far from trivial. This is a serious violation of human rights,” the president of the Commission Against Racism, Martine Brunschwig Graf told newspaper Tribune de Genève in an interview.

Graf, a Liberal party member of parliament, pointed out that Switzerland already has the means for dealing with people who have broken the law or who refuse to return home. In particular, she pointed to the possibility in most cases of forcible returns.

However Graf acknowledged that there remains an issue for citizens of certain countries with whom Switzerland has no re-admission agreements in place. Nevertheless, she queried what would happen to these people should the internment idea succeed.

“Will we leave them locked up indefinitely with no prospect of getting out as it is impossible to return them? These people have not killed anyone!” she asked.

Graf believes that the issues are becoming further complicated by the political rhetoric used, particularly because the government is often seen as failing to deliver on its promises with regard to immigration. This in turn leads to disappointment and discontent, according to Graf.

She also said she could understand that people who had been in the country for four to five years would want to stay.

“This does not make them criminals,” she said.

“These refugees, economic or otherwise, do not come with a light heart. They come to Switzerland to find another life, and unfortunately, we do not have the capacity to accommodate them all.” 

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ANALYSIS: Will immigration to Switzerland continue to grow or could it slow?

In the past few years, an increasing number of foreigners have come to Switzerland, swelling the ranks of its population to 9 million people. Will this trend continue in the future?

ANALYSIS: Will immigration to Switzerland continue to grow or could it slow?

From a country of just 8 million people a decade ago, Switzerland’s population grew to over 9 million residents in 2023 — primarily due to more foreign nationals coming in.

“Switzerland has been in a situation of uninterrupted demographic growth for several decades, and this is explained in particular by the arrival of young migrants, who also contribute to the Swiss birth rate,” Philippe Wanner, professor at the Institute of Demography and Social Economics at the University of Geneva told The Local.

Just in the period between July 2022 and July 2023, for instance, more than 90,000 foreigners settled in Switzerland.

Now forecasts call for the population to swell to 10 million within the next decade — which has prompted the right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP) to collect enough signatures to launch a national vote in the near future to stop more foreigners from coming into the country.

The SVP argues that Switzerland’s infrastructure — including housing, healthcare system, and public transportation — would not be able to withstand so many more residents.

READ ALSO : Switzerland faces new anti-immigration vote 

This is based on the assumption that as many — or even more — foreigners will continue to move to Switzerland in future, attracted by salaries that are quite a bit higher than the wages they would earn for the same kind of work in their home countries.

But is there a credible scenario under which immigration will slow down?

According to Swiss demographer Hendrik Budliger, high immigration numbers in recent years “don’t necessarily mean the trend will continue.”

Certain things would have to happen at the political and economic level, however — both in Switzerland and abroad — for this scenario to become reality.

These are the main ones:

Fewer people leaving their home countries

One factor, according to Budliger, would be that other countries in Europe that are grappling with labour shortages as Switzerland is “will try to retain or bring back their workforce.”

In Italy and Portugal, for instance, “significant tax deductions are granted” to keep their workers from leaving.

“If more countries create such [financial] incentives to retain employees, Switzerland will become less attractive,” he pointed out.

Economist Manuel Buchmann agreed that  “EU nations themselves need this skilled workforce and are willing to do a lot to ensure that their nationals don’t leave the country.”

Fewer job vacancies in Switzerland

The country is suffering from an acute shortage of qualified workers — the main reason why many employers are hiring workforce from the EU and EFTA (Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein) nations.

If, however, Switzerland’s low unemployment rate should increase, or if suitable candidates can be found within the country, then companies will not recruit employees from abroad.

This is especially true as the Swiss law stipulates that a job can be offered to a foreign national only if no qualified candidates can be found in Switzerland.

Anti-immigration initiatives are accepted

In 2020, 61.7 percent of voters turned down SVP’s proposal to curb immigration from the EU.

This meant that Swiss companies could continue to recruit from those countries.

However, if voters decide to go the opposite way — for instance, by accepting the SVP’s latest anti-immigration proposal — then the government would have to implement measures to drastically curb the number of foreigners coming into the country.

READ ALSO: Why Switzerland can’t rely on foreign workers to fill its labour shortages

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