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LIVING IN SWITZERLAND

Is it legal to burn a Swiss flag?

This may seem like a strange question, except that it has been voted on in Switzerland’s National Council this week.

Is it legal to burn a Swiss flag?
Swiss flag sparked parliamentary debates. Photo: Pixabay

The Swiss are generally very patriotic and have a strong sense of national pride and identity. It would therefore be reasonable to expect that burning, or otherwise desecrating, their flag would be illegal, as it is in many countries.

However, the National Council’s Legal Affairs Committee rejected this week by 15 votes to 10 a motion submitted by MP Jean-Luc Addor, which aimed to outlaw intentional destruction of “Swiss flag and other emblems of Swiss sovereignty”.

What does the current legislation say in this matter?

Interestingly, the law states that no flag (either Swiss, cantonal, or municipal) can be desecrated if it is displayed by authorities, though no such limits are imposed in the private sphere.

In other words, if a flag is flown in “official” capacity on August 1st, Swiss national holiday, and someone inflicts intentional damage to it, then yes, that is illegal.

But if, say, football fans tear or burn the flag after a game because the Swiss team lost, this is perfectly legal.

Addor, the MP who filed the motion, argued however that the flag, which is a symbol of Switzerland, “must be protected, regardless of where it is displayed or by whom it is displayed”.

Freedom of expression

The majority of the National Council Committee disagreed with this stance, however.

They pointed out that destroying public property can’t be treated in the same way (from a legal perspective) as destroying one’s own personal belongings.

The official line is that “even if such signs of protest [in the private sphere] express dissatisfaction with the State, they cannot be criminalised out of respect for freedom of expression and the principle of proportionality”.

Committee members added that even though neighbours Germany, Italy and Austria want to “protect their emblems of sovereignty, in Switzerland, such provisions would not be effective”.

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For members

LIVING IN SWITZERLAND

FACT OR FICTION: Does Switzerland really exist?

You may think, 'of course it does, I am sitting here right now'. But trying to convince doubters on social media that Switzerland is real may be a challenge.

FACT OR FICTION: Does Switzerland really exist?

We have already had the “Switzerland versus Sweden debate” and have proven that they are, in fact, two different countries.

We don’t know whether the same thing is happening over in Sweden, but here we have an online “community of people dedicated to proving that Switzerland does not exist”. 

And it is not just a handful of rogue individuals who have nothing better to do than bash the tiny (non-existent) nation.

Thousands of people have taken time to post “proof” on Reddit’s “Switzerland is Fake” thread that the Alpine country is just too good to be true; instead, the picturesque mountains, lakes, and castles have been “photoshopped” in what could be the largest conspiracy since the moon landing.

“They are putting AI generated fake cities in front of their fake mountains,” one person said, backing his claim by a photo.

Among other “fake” images of Switzerland is one showing a man “caught” spreading artificial snow on a miniature version of the Alps. 

And then, when an (allegedly) Swiss person tried to prove his existence, online doubters “unmasked” him as an impostor.

What certainly doesn’t help to dissuade this community, is a very real Swiss Miniature Park in Lugano, where the whole of Switzerland is displayed in a tiny version.

Is it all a scam? Photo: Swissminiatur media

It only feeds into the disbelivers’ arguments that everything about the country is fake.

‘Abolish Switzerland’

While the Reddit community’s insistence that Switzerland doesn’t exist is (hopefully) tongue-in-cheek, real attempts to “erase” the country from the world’s map have actually been made – some more successfully than others.

In 2009, the former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi submitted a proposal to the United Nations to abolish Switzerland and divide it up along linguistic lines, giving parts of the country to Germany, France and Italy.

The motion was thrown out – officially because it violates the UN Charter, which states that no member country can threaten the existence of another – and unofficially, because the idea was, well, crazy.

But wait – there is more

In much more recent times, in March 2024, shortly before his trip to Europe, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken published a map that put Sweden where Switzerland should be – and Switzerland was nowhere to be found.

The error was quickly noticed and the relevant post deleted from social media – but not before users saw how the US had rendered Switzerland non-existent.

So does Switzerland really exist?

Unless and until proven otherwise by scientists (or Sweden), Switzerland is a real country – just take our word for it.

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