SHARE
COPY LINK

SECURITY

Survey: Swiss fear for safety since July terror attacks

Some 75 percent of Swiss fear more for their safety following the recent attacks in France and Germany, according to a new survey.

Survey: Swiss fear for safety since July terror attacks
Flowers in Ansbach, where a suicide bomber injured several people. Photo: Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/DPA/AFP
The survey, carried out by newspaper 20 Minutes, asked more than 18,000 people across the country how safe they felt following the events of recent weeks, including the terror attack in Nice on July 14th which killed more than 80 people and the suicide bombing in Ansbach, Germany, 10 days later. 
 
Some 75 percent of respondents said they felt less safe than before. 
 
Consequently, 64 percent said they would be willing to give up some of their personal freedom to enhance their security in Switzerland, found the survey.
 
Among the extra security measures cited, 29 percent said the country should boost intelligence and surveillance, 27 percent thought there should be more police and army personnel in sensitive areas, while 20 percent wanted the intelligence service to step up preventive surveillance.
 
Only 11 percent said they didn’t think the country should put in place any additional security measures. 
 
Political analyst Fabio Wasserfallen, who examined the results, said the fact people were unresistant to the idea of increased state surveillance was a “remarkable” change in attitude.
 
“Most people have understood that they cannot prevent terrorism themselves and look to the state to do it,” he said.
 
The survey is an indicator of public opinion ahead of the September 25th referendum on changes to the Federal Intelligence Act. 
 
Aimed at boosting intelligence in the face of terrorism, the changes would give the Swiss intelligence service (NDB) more powers to gather information, including the ability to monitor, record and analyze the private conversations of citizens. 
 
The federal government is supporting the changes, saying they “provide the NDB with the modern resources it needs to fulfill its task of safeguarding the security of our country”.
 
The NDB will only be able to use the new measures if it complies with strict conditions, it said.
 
But many are against the changes, with the Socialist Party (SP) saying the new law would “open to the door to state snooping” on people’s private lives. 
 
More information doesn’t mean more security, it feels, pointing out that many of the recent attacks have been carried out by people already known to police in some way. 
 
However Beat Arnold, an MP for Switzerland’s largest party, the Swiss People’s Party (SVP), agrees with the new changes, writing on the party’s website: “There is no freedom without security. Switzerland needs this law”.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

CRIME

Hoax bomb threats against French airports ‘traced to Swiss email’

Repeated bomb threats against dozens of French airports which led to evacuations and flight cancellations have been 'traced to an email address in Switzerland', according to French authorities.

Hoax bomb threats against French airports 'traced to Swiss email'

More than 70 bomb threats have been made against French airports in the past week, leading to evacuations at dozens of airports and at least 130 flights cancelled.

Most of the alerts were triggered by emails warning of a bomb in the airport – more than 70 such emails have been received by airports around the country such as Toulouse, Bordeaux, Paris Beauvais, Marseille and dozens of smaller airports – including Basel-Mulhouse on the Franco-Swiss border. 

On Sunday French Transport Minister Clément Beaune said that “almost all of the threats have been traced to the same email address, situated in Switzerland”.

He added: “Since Wednesday, it is almost always the same email address that is used, located outside the European Union, in Switzerland”.

He called on hosting sites to help the French authorities, saying: “Everyone has a responsibility, including the platforms and social networks, not to support this kind of attack and to cooperate as quickly as possible with the French civil aviation authorities and our justice system.”

In France, the maximum penalty for making a hoax bomb threat is two years in jail and a €30,000 fine.

As well as airport evacuations and flight disruption, French tourist sites have also been hit with bomb hoaxes – the Palace of Versailles has been evacuated seven times in the past week.

It comes in the context of a tense situation in France as the country raised its terror alert to maximum after an apparent Islamist attack on Friday, October 13th in which a teacher was killed and two others wounded.

Security at large events such as the Rugby World Cup matches has been stepped up. 

SHOW COMMENTS