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Car packed with 23 family members stopped at Swiss border

Police said Tuesday they were "amazed" to find an SUV at the Swiss-German border crammed with 23 members of the same family.

A person driving in Switzerland.
A person driving. Photo by Jaromír Kavan on Unsplash

The seven-seater Seat Alhambra, carrying the members of an “extended family” on their way from Poland to the Swiss capital Bern, was stopped by a customs officer on Monday morning, according to German police.

The Swiss official was “certainly amazed” by his discovery at the border between the German town of Weil am Rhein and the city of Basel, police said in a statement.

The family, which included nine adults and 14 children, was briefly barred from entering Switzerland and the German authorities were “notified”, added the statement.

However, once all paperwork was completed, the family was allowed to enter Switzerland, but “not all in the Seat Alhambra”, police said.

The driver of the vehicle, a resident of Switzerland, could “expect to receive a fine” for carrying the passengers “completely unsecured” in his vehicle, German police said.

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OFFBEAT

MP up in arms over Swiss military’s choice of wine

Switzerland’s military is facing financial woes— its coffers are short of 1 billion francs to fund new arms purchases. But according to one MP, the army has a more pressing problem right now.

MP up in arms over Swiss military’s choice of wine

On March 30th, a disturbing scene happened at the military base in Thun, in canton Bern.

At a ceremony to which soldiers’ families were invited, Italian wine was served to the guests.

This faux-pas may have remained under wraps and kept as a military secret if it weren’t for the vigilance of one member of the parliament.

But this incident was not lost on MP Yvan Pahud, who, as a member of the right-wing Swiss People’s Party, is principally highly critical of any kind of international influence in Switzerland’s internal affairs — be it the country’s ties with the European Union or, in this particular case, foreign wine.

Therefore, as the National Council’s deputies debated various matters of national importance during a special session on April 15th, Pahud brought up the issue of foreign alcoholic beverages served by the army.

He argued that parents and guests who attended the event “were outraged that our Swiss army was promoting foreign wine, when  our country has its own winegrowers.”

The MPs remained neutral on this issue, and the Defence Department has yet to address this hot-button topic.

It is not known if at least some concessions to ‘Swissness’ were made at the event — that is, whether the bottles of Italian wine were uncorked with Swiss army knives.

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