|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
Xenophobic referendum defeated in Switzerland
By Marianne Arens
5 October 2000
Use
this version to print
On the last Sunday in September voters in Switzerland defeated
a referendum calling for the regulating of immigration.
By a clear majority, 63.7 percent of those who voted said no to
a halt in immigration.
The rejection of this xenophobic initiative was particularly
high in all areas with an above average proportion of foreign
residents, and particularly in the western Swiss cantons of Geneva,
Waadt, Neuenburg and Jura, where approximately three-quarters
voted no. In Geneva, where over 76 percent rejected
the foreigners out proposal, a third of residents
do not possess a Swiss passport.
The referendum required that the proportion of foreign
citizens resident in Switzerland should not exceed 18 percent
of the population. The ratio today is 19.3 percent. One
might ask whether this particularly high figure in comparison
with the European average denotes an unusual openness regarding
immigration into Switzerland. The opposite, however, is the case.
Swiss naturalisation policy is so lengthy, expensive and riddled
with obstacles that those of foreign nationality usually remain
precisely that for generations, i.e., foreigners.
Refugees who request asylum in Switzerland have a particularly
difficult time finding accommodation. On average, only 5.8 percent
are recognised as liable for asylum; the remainder must leave
the country as quickly as possible or face deportation.
On the other hand, due to low tax levels, Switzerland isafter
Luxembourg where foreigners make up 34.1 percent of the populationthe
second most attractive country in Europe for the wealthy and entrepreneurs.
With a rate of 25.1 percent in 1999, Switzerland offers
the lowest taxation for business of all the most important economic
locations, was the jubilant message found on an official
information web site for enterprises seeking to locate there.
After concluding contracts with the European Union, their jubilation
increased even further: The bilateral agreement between
Switzerland and the European Union is wrapped up! they wrote.
Switzerland has become even more attractive for foreign
investors! Foreign entrepreneurs are obviously desirable.
The double standard can already be seen.
What the referendum called for
The 18 percent initiative quite openly divided
immigrants into categories according to their usefulness for the
economy. In the text of the referendum can be read:
To be taken into account in the calculation are particularly
settlers, those with a yearlong visa, recognised asylum-seekers
and foreigners who have been granted residency on humanitarian
grounds. Short-term visitors with or without gainful employment
will be taken in account if their stay lasts more than eight months,
is renewed and when they are granted permission to bring other
family members.... Not included in the calculation are illegal
immigrants, seasonal workers without any family, members of international
organisations, members of consular and diplomatic services, qualified
scientists and leading business personnel, artists, those coming
for recuperation, exchange students, foreign students and pupils
as well as tourists.
The distinction between useful foreigners and those
who are regarded as a burden could not be clearer. In contrast
to high-level business personnel and researchers normal
workers should have unrestricted access only if they stay in the
country for a short period and come without
family members. This would restore the particularly brutal
status of seasonal workers, for which Switzerland was once notorious.
The disturbing fact remains that such a referendum was able
to win the support of 36.3 percent of the voters for an unconcealed
anti-foreigner and anti-working-class initiative. In some inner
Swiss cantons almost 50 percent voted for it (Schwyz, 48 percent;
Aargau, 47 percent). Despite the explosive nature of the issue,
participation was 44.7 percent, only slightly above the usual
(40.7 percent participated on average in the last 10 referenda),
which means that not even every second voter felt it necessary
to express an opinion.
How is this to be explained?
The answer to this question lies in the arguments of the two
sides: Although the government, parties, business and the media
unanimously called for a no vote, not a single one of them tackled
the issue from a principled humane political standpoint. Those
opposing the referendum argued exclusively on the basis of what
was good for Switzerland and thus in the final analysis did not
substantially differ from the arguments of those supporting the
initiative.
The referendum was initiated by the liberal democratic parliamentary
deputy Philipp Mueller from Aargau and was supported by other
individual politicians as well as the right-wing Swiss democrats
and Lega dei ticinesi. The right-wing populist Swiss
People's Party (SVP), which won so many votes in last year's parliamentary
elections with their demagogic party chief Christoph Blocher,
was split. The business magnate and multimillionaire Blocher and
his party leadership opposed the 18 percent initiative, but they
were unable to get the genie they had released back into the bottle.
The SVP delegate conference in Geneva decided to recommend a yes
vote.
Federal President Adolf Ogi, also an SVP member, explained
that acceptance of the 18 percent initiative would have negative
consequences for the economy and for foreign relations. He said
it was inhuman and not practicable. The predominant
majority of the measure's opponents argued along the same lines
as Ogi, that it was not in the interest of Switzerland, its international
relations and its internationally operating economy to introduce
rigid immigration controls at present. To project a xenophobic
image would not be opportune at the present moment, they contended.
These arguments were also partially adopted by the Committee
for a tolerant Switzerland, which considers itself left-wing.
Those belonging to this committee included both the Social Democrats
and Young Socialists, as well as the Greens, the trade unions,
immigrant organisations and Solidarité sans frontières
(Solidarity without Borders). Although this committee published
some critical articles, its representatives expressly supported
the arguments of the government and business associations. Berne
Young Socialists national committee member Ursula Wyss wrote,
an acceptance of the initiative would not only be a xenophobic
signal, it would also endanger the bilateral contracts with the
European Union, and would push Swiss foreign and economic policy
offside.
The Liberal Democratic Party (FDP), the Christian Democratic
People's Party (CVP), trade and business associations such as
Vorort, the bourgeois conservative newspaper Neue
Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ)all had suddenly discovered
how much the Swiss economy and society owes to foreigners. Almost
daily the NZZ carried detailed reports about hospitals, building
sites, old people's homes and multinational companies which would
not function at all without foreign workers. Foreigners
are of above average industriousness, help to absorb conjunctural
economic fluctuations and pay more into the public coffers than
they receive in return, Christoph Wehrli wrote September
8 in the NZZ.
The discussion in the bourgeois press became openly cynical
when it dealt with questions such as why a high proportion of
foreigners did not represent a burden for the environment, or
how to deal with the damage to Swiss children who attended school
alongside foreign children traumatised by civil war.
Up and down the country, prominent figures such as Alois Bischofberger,
chief economist of the Credit Suisse, and Peter Hasler, director
of the Swiss employers' association, announced how useful some
foreigners could be for the positive growth of the economy, and
to help finance the Swiss pensions system. Any negative effects
which allegedly inevitably accompany the presence of people without
a Swiss passport could be controlled much better by parliamentary
measures, by a new more subtly formulated aliens act, than by
the clumsy 18 percent limit, they argued.
For example, in the course of a public debate with a proponent
of the initiative Hasler explained: For us it's about not
having any problems with foreigners, but at the same time having
sufficient employees for the needs of the economy. On the one
hand we want foreigners to be well integrated, living together
amicably. That does not happen in all areas, we are completely
united on that. That is a problem, which must be solved. But to
write a number into the constitution ... is a stupidity.... We
could no longer decide freely about meeting the demand for foreign
workers and other immigrants.... We want to stop emigration from
countries outside the EU, limiting it to highly qualified people....
We fear that it would be catastrophic for Switzerland's economic
situation if one no longer had the liberty to look for workers
where they are located.... We understand the uneasiness concerning
criminality and the abuse of asylum rights.... Also the fact that
in the sphere of asylum we are often dealing with those seeking
to escape for economic reasons, is well known to us. But those
are problems which we cannot solve with this initiative.... In
jobs that are dirty, noisy and physically arduous, we are dependent
on unqualified foreigners.
Conflict between business and the right-wing
extremists
Such contributions must cause great confusion for the unsophisticated
reader. Are these supposed to be counter-arguments to this xenophobic
initiative? Where is the talk about defending foreign colleagues?
Who is representing whose interests in all this?
The divided attitude of the Swiss bourgeoisie towards the right-wing
extremists is not the result of any liberal democratic principles,
but arises from the increasing impossibility of uniting global
economic interests with traditional nationalism.
The special political position of neutrality, which accompanied
and shielded the rapid ascent of the Swiss economy in the first
half of the twentieth century and the gigantic increase in the
wealth of its banks, was transfigured into the nationalist myth
of an armed free Swiss confederation repelling everything
foreign. As the Bergier report detailed earlier this year, it
was this form of national self-affirmation which led to Jewish
refugees being turned back at Switzerland's border in 1942-43,
under the pretext that the boat was full. At the same
time, the Swiss banks hoarded the funds of both the culprits and
the victims, becoming immeasurably richer themselves in the process.
But today, in view of a globalised world market, and the introduction
of the euro throughout Europe, it has become impossible to preserve
Switzerland's isolated special position any longer. And while
the gnomes of Zurich, business magnates and federal politicians
all push to open the country up internationally, and call for
membership of the EU and UN, they come into ever-sharper conflict
with the political forces of the extreme right.
Thus in the last years the activities of the swollen ranks
of the Swiss extremist right-wing subculture, spreading fear and
anxiety in villages and run-down suburbs, have become intolerable.
Attacks on young people, left-wingers and above all people with
dark skin are already on the agenda. In Berne in July the shared
house Solterpolter was attacked and fired on with
live ammunition. In St. Gallen, a group of skinheads attacked
Africans waiting outside the African club. Bourgeois
public opinion reacted with embarrassment when snarling skinheads
disrupted the traditional speech on the occasion of the Swiss
national holiday on August 1 by parliamentary deputy Klaus Villiger
on the historic Rütli Meadow.
Fundamental democratic rights threatened
Establishment politicians and the media breathed a sigh of
relief when it became clear that the xenophobic referendum had
not gained a majority. The leading employers' association economiesuisse
commented a few hours after the initiative's rejection that acceptance
would have caused great damage both to the economy and the
image of Switzerland.
On the same day, the NZZ encouraged the government that with
the planned total revision of the aliens act after more
than 30 years they were taking the matter into their own hands
and would no longer have to make policy on immigrations under
the periodic pressure of dangerous initiatives [like the recent
referendum]. Law Minister Ruth Metzler (CVP) promised that
the no vote would not mean free passage for unrestricted immigration.
Immigrants, refugees and Swiss workers can only regard such
views as a declaration of war. Already today Swiss policy on immigration
counts among the most reactionary systems in Europe, and the methods
that are employed represent a threat to fundamental democratic
rights.
A few days before the foreigners out vote, the
Federal Office for Refugees (BFF) published figures showing that
of 53,000 Kosovan refugees in Switzerland almost 32,000 had been
forced to return home by the end of August. An employee of the
Swiss Refugee Aid revealed the ruthlessness with which the Office
for Refugees often acts. In Kosovo she met with two 17- and 18-year-old
girls who had been separated from their families in Lucerne within
a day and were then sent back to Pristina. From there they had
returned to their burned-out family homeswithout any prospect
of schooling, work or a basis for their subsistence. Another example
is the death of the Palestinian refugee Khaled Abuzarifeh, who
was suffocated in March 1999 during his deportation at Zurich
Kloten airport, when his mouth was bound up with tape.
In the run-up to the referendum, politicians and the authorities
had boasted about their restrictive measures against immigrants
and the accelerated deportation of refugees without papers. Repeated
raids took place, including one at a hotel building site in Wengen,
where two days before the referendum a group of construction workers
without documents were immediately taken into custody pending
deportation. In another case, 150 policemen carried out a raid
at Meise, a refugee transit home in Winterthur, where
16 persons were arrested mostly for petty reasons, such as missing
identity papers.
The fight against Überfremdung (swamping with foreigners),
the control and restriction of unwanted immigrants,
the division of those without a Swiss passport into the useful
and unwelcome (and their corresponding treatment) is already a
realitypractised and supported by both proponents of the
18 percent initiative and its opponents.
If one considers all these facts and the climate that is produced
by such national practices, one must revise any initial negative
judgement about those who voted in the referendum. The fact that
1.3 million Swiss citizens defied this climate and rejected the
foreigners out politics is nevertheless not a bad
result. One can assume that at least a large proportion of them
rejected the initiative out of principled human considerations.
The referendum was the sixth attempt to push through such an
immigration ban since the notorious Schwarzenbach initiative of
1970, which sought to impose a limit of 10 percent in each individual
canton on. All six referenda suffered a defeat.
The principled refusal expressed in the recent vote is not
enough to repel the attacks on human rights contained in the initiative.
Society, which values the possession of a document made from paper
and red cardboard more highly than a shared humanity, and which
categorises people according to their immediate usefulness for
the economyfor the profit of the top 10,000represents
a threat to all who do not belong to this layer.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |