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IMMIGRATION

Swiss back shared migrant responsibility

Switzerland said on Wednesday it would be willing to adopt an EU migration proposal currently being debated by Brussels for the even geographical distribution of asylum seekers across Europe.

Swiss back shared migrant responsibility
Swiss President Simonetta Sommaruga. Photo: AFP

"It is high time for Europe to have a distribution ratio based on solidarity," President Simonetta Sommaruga said during a meeting with her Austrian counterpart, Heinz Fischer, in Vienna.

"Switzerland will join it." 
   
Sommaruga added that "more can be done" for the thousands of refugees trying to reach Europe's southern shores by boat.
   
Both Switzerland and Austria insisted the influx of migrants should not be borne alone by the countries where they first arrive — Italy, Malta, Cyprus and Greece.
   
Sommaruga said Switzerland had already decided to take in another 3,000 Syrian refugees in addition to the 10,000 already in the country.

"There is no national solution," she said.

"We need European answers."

A non-member of the EU, Switzerland is nevertheless part of the Schengen agreement, which enables the free movement of people between a large number of European countries.
   
The death of more than 1,200 illegal migrants in the Mediterranean last month has sparked strong debate among European nations on how to deal with the situation.
   
The European Commission, the EU executive, is due on May 13th to present a migration policy that will include proposals to make legal economic immigration to the EU easier, and to set refugee quotas for all member states.
   
It will go before EU heads of government and heads of state at their June 25th-26th summit.
   
The last attempt to change the rules, in 2013, failed when 24 of the 28 EU member states voted against.

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SWISS CITIZENSHIP

How many foreign residents become Swiss citizens each year?

New government data reveals how many foreign nationals become Swiss, and who they are.

How many foreign residents become Swiss citizens each year?

In 2023, some 41,299 foreign nationals acquired Swiss citizenship, according to new data gathered by the State Secretariat for Migration (SEM).

That reflects a similar number to those who naturalised in recent years meaning the trend is fairly stable.

Just over 17 percent of them were naturalised under the simplified / fast-track process that is reserved for foreign spouses or children of Swiss citizens, as well as third-generation foreigners.

The majority, however, had to go through the lengthier ‘ordinary’ procedure.

READ ALSO: When can I start counting my residency in Switzerland towards citizenship?

Where did these new citizens come from?

Half of those who were naturalised came from Germany, Italy, France, Portugal, and Spain.

A third (33 percent) hail from other European nations, while 17 percent originate from third countries.

What else does the data reveal?

Other than the number of Swiss passport recipients, SEM also looked at immigration figures for 2023.

It found that  the course of the year, 181,553  foreign nationals moved to Switzerland — 95 percent from the EU or EFTA states (Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein).

The main reason for the move was employment, followed by family reunification, and education or training.

People from outside EU / EFTA benefitted from 7,480 work permits — 848  were issued to UK nationals and 6,632 to people from other third countries. 

This means that quota available for these people — 12,000 in all, including 3,500 set aside for the Brits — was not fully used.

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