Will the Swiss seek fresh curbs on immigration?

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Welcome to Aargau in German-speaking Switzerland. Behind its peaceful landscape and apparent calm lies a burning debate launched by the initiators of the referendum scheduled for November 30 in Switzerland.

Among them is the Effingen village mayor, a member of the Aargau Green Party. Andreas Thommen is Secretary General of the Ecopop association. He has campaigned against overpopulation, the theme of the popular initiative to limit immigration in Switzerland to 0.2% of the population per year, in order to curb the environmental impact of population growth linked to immigration, the highest in Europe.

“The ecological balance has long been destroyed in Switzerland. We want to preserve nature. Is it worth it, in the name of economic success, to put concrete everywhere, and not to leave any other choice for our children? To leave as legacy to our children a country which is completely dependent on the outside, whether in terms of food, energy or raw materials? I am very clear that it’s not a world I want to leave to my children,” says Thommen.

Ecopop’s proposal has stirred an already heated controversy. In February, the Swiss voted for an initiative launched by the UDC, the Swiss most conservative right wing party, that establishing quotas for foreigners, though without quantifying limits.

The new proposal wants to limit the number of immigrants to 16,000 people a year, five times less than today.

On the streets of Bern, opinions over its merits are mixed.

“This is a disaster. Just because we cannot be excluded from the rest of Europe. We’re at the center of Europe and we cannot close our borders,” one man told euronews.

“We agree that it is necessary to limit the arrival of so many people compared to the population and size of the country, but there’s a limit to that. This is too restrictive,” said another man. “It’s getting a little xenophobic” adds his wife.

One female shopper told euronews: “There are lots of people who come here just to take advantage of Switzerland, because we opened our doors to everyone; many people come here and don’t do anything, they just take advantage!”

Switzerland now has 8 million inhabitants, a quarter of which are foreigners. As Europe’s most densely populated country, Ecopop campaigners believe Switzerland can not afford more demographic pressure.

The group’s spokesperson, Anita Messere, insists the initiative is in no way xenophobic and is fighting against a logic of exponential growth. And the immigration threshold requested by Ecopop is still higher than in other European countries.

“It is not a racial issue. It is really a problem of numbers. With 73,000 more people coming in each year, it represents 40000 more homes to build, and 56,000 more cars! That’s what immigration induced in 2013. We just want to reduce the number of people allowed in the country, to have a lesser impact on the landscape,” says Messere.

Arguments the Swiss government rejects amid fear that Ecopop’s initiative will compromise the bilateral agreements that govern trade between Switzerland and the European Union.

Based on freedom of movement, the agreements have already been questioned after the February vote.

If Ecopop is successful that will create turmoil for business, according to Cristina Gaggini, one of the heads of Swiss Economy, the country’s main business federation: “Concretely, it means that our companies will have difficulties hiring staff, since the quota which is set is extremely low. It is not even enough to absorb the demand in terms of political refugees.”

“On the other hand, with the EU we’re already in a relatively difficult situation since the vote on February 9th. We have to find a compromise solution, and it will take some time. So a second consecutive vote on the same subject in the same year, I think will pummel discussions with the European Union for a very long time,” added Gaggini.

With low unemployment, and a lack of higher education graduates or skilled labour, Switzerland’s nationals alone can not meet the demand of enterprises for workforce.

Jean Marc Probst, President of the Federation of Swiss trade associations, runs a machinery business. The construction sector is largely dependent on foreign labour.

“The last mechanics I hired are French, cross border workers. I also hired Italians, people who are in markets where there is not full employment. And I hired people who are highly skilled, people that I can not find on the Swiss market. So for me to develop and maintain my business, taking into account that some are retiring, I need this foreign labour,” said Probst.

The medical sector is among those worried by the Ecopop initiative. We visit the University Hospital of the canton of Vaud in Lausanne.

With some 10,000 employees, foreigners make up half the workforce.

The risk of compromising the bilateral agreements, which among others regulates research exchanges, is added to that of not being able to tap into the pool of foreign labour.

Pierre-

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