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RACISM

‘No Asians’: Zurich’s ETH university hit by racism

Asian students at Switzerland’s prestigious ETH university were recently the targets of racism, it has emerged.

The ETH complex in Zurich. By Tiankongguangzi - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0,
The ETH complex in Zurich. By Tiankongguangzi - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0,

Racist graffiti and slogans appeared at the university’s multicultural Hönggerberg campus on the outskirts of Zurich.

The words “No Asians” were written on a lift door, while photos of Asian students were crossed out in a photo.

In other instances, the work of Asian students was covered with obscene drawings and racist slogans while the students were not at their desks.

Read also: ‘Go back to Africa’ – reports of racism hit record high in Switzerland

Students at the university were split on how to react, with some calling for the culprit to be kicked out of the institution and others saying the racist insults should be ignored, according to Swiss daily NZZ.

Finally, a number of students went to the police, others approached internal ETH contact points and there were even rumours that the Chinese embassy had been called on.

The ETH response came from the highest levels. Students were invited to a closed meeting in which university vice-chancellor Sarah Springman warned that people who did not comply with the institution’s culture of respect would face punishment.

The university told the NZZ that the variety of different cultures at the ETH was both a strength and a challenge for the institution.

“Every year, the ETH welcomes a lot of new people, including students and those doing their doctorates, who have not yet taken on the ETH culture,” the university said.

A new ETH code of conduct stresses that discrimination, sexual harassment, bullying and threats of any sort will not be tolerated.

The racist slogans have now disappeared from the ETH’s Hönggerberg campus and most students are happy with the action taken by the administration to tackle the problem, although some say the response was too slow.

However, the NZZ said there was still a certain potential for conflict, citing comments from students about a growing number of Chinese residents in student homes at the campus. The study room in one of the buildings is apparently known as “Chinatown”, according to the daily.

But one doctoral student from Luxembourg put the issue in perspective. He said that anyone moving to the ETH knew they would find themselves in an international environment. “If they don’t like, they shouldn’t come here,” he said.

He noted that while life in the large student dwellings was not without problems, these was no excuse for racism.

“I’m not angry,” said one Chinese student. “It’s just a bit of shame to have such childish idiots as neighbours.”

Read also: Racism in Switzerland – ‘People of colour are automatically perceived as different’

RACISM

Why are racist incidents on the rise in Switzerland?

Switzerland’s Federal Commission against Racism (EKR) announced this week that the number incidents of racism reported to it rose by almost a quarter in 2023.

Why are racist incidents on the rise in Switzerland?

In a new report published on Sunday, the EKR revealed that 876 incidents of racism had been reported to the body. In comparison, 708 incidents were reported to the EKR in 2022. 

That reflects a rise of 24 percent in the number of reported incidents.

The current conflict in the Middle East was highlighted explicitly as fuelling the rise in incidences of racism.

Some 69 reports related to anti-Arab racism, while anti-Muslim xenophobia was cited in 62 reports. There were also 46 incidents of anti-semitic abuse recorded last year

Read More: Switzerland acknowledges ‘systemic racism’ in the country

Another section of the report significantly identified right-wing populist political campaigns as a significant motivator of racist hate, promoted through flyers with xenophobic slogans or visual tropes. 

Discrimination based on nationality or ethnicity constituted the largest share of reports at 387 reports, followed by anti-black racism with 327 documented incidents.

Additionally, 155 reports related to a person’s legal right to remain in Switzerland, while 137 reported discrimination based on gender. 

Read More: Are foreigners in Switzerland likely to experience some form of racism?

The EKR report also identified where these racist incidents were most likely to occur: Educational institutions, such as schools and universities, were the most frequent locations for incidents at 181 reports, followed by the workplace at 124 incidents and open public spaces at 113. 

With almost two hundred of the 876 reported incidents taking place at schools and universities, Ursula Schneider-Schüttel, President of the EKR, had words of warning: 

“One finding from the report in particular deserves our attention: reports of racial discrimination at school are at the forefront this year. This is worrying.

“School should be where children and young people are protected from discrimination.

“We must therefore ask ourselves what responsibility educational institutions have in ensuring a non-discriminatory learning environment and what it takes to achieve this responsibility can be met.” 

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