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European policy defines Swiss immigration laws

Thousands of illegal immigrants applied for a residence permit in Italy last March. Reuters

Supporters of a plan to further restrict immigration - to be voted on in a referendum next weekend - cannot be accused of xenophobia, an expert says.

Historian Thomas Gees says the debate on the issue is marked by fundamental differences between the left and right in Switzerland and fails to take account of European integration.

Opponents often forget that any law on immigration is discriminatory by definition, says Gees who worked for a commission of eminent historians on the role of Switzerland during the Holocaust era.

“Otherwise we would have to turn back the clock by nearly 100 years when immigration was not restricted at all,” he told swissinfo.

The new law aims to limit immigration from countries outside the European Union and the European Free Trade Association (Efta). Exemptions will be made for highly skilled workers.

Approved by parliament last year, the law was challenged by the Green Party and aid organisations which collected enough signatures to force the referendum.

“Ideology and prejudice is part of the discussion. I’m convinced that the left challenges the law simply because it carries the marks of the [rightwing] justice minister. [But] there are good reasons to limit the free movement of people to protect the domestic labour market. And this has next to nothing to do with xenophobia,” says Gees.

Up until the 20th century, the shoe was on the other foot. Tens of thousands of people left Switzerland in search of a better life. It was the construction of the railway network that brought a first wave of immigrants – mainly from Germany, France, Italy and Austria – to the country.

High rates

“Switzerland became very attractive in the 20th century for people from neighbouring countries,” the historian explains. ” In a European comparison Switzerland has one of the highest rates of foreigners. At the same time social tensions are very rare.”

He says there is an irrefutable logic behind the distinction between EU citizens and other immigrants.

“Switzerland has signed an accord on the free movement of people with the EU, so the immigration law does not apply to these citizens. Besides, the 25-member bloc introduced similar discriminatory measures.”

Gees dismisses suggestions that the Swiss law is targeting people from the Balkans who make up the biggest single group of immigrants from non-EU states.

However it is an open question how restrictive the rules for non-European immigrants should be.

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EU bilateral accords

This content was published on Switzerland and the European Union have concluded two sets of bilateral accords following voters’ rejection in 1992 of the European Economic Area Treaty. A Swiss request for negotiations on full membership has been frozen. The EU is Switzerland’s most important trading partner and there are close cultural and political links with Brussels.

Read more: EU bilateral accords

In line with EU

“I think Switzerland is unlikely to develop an immigration policy completely independent from the EU,” he says.

Cooperation among EU member states is at present very limited. They approved measures to improve the integration of families and set guidelines for student exchanges. Preparations are also underway for a possible introduction of a common work permit for highly skilled workers from outside the Union.

Otherwise they take different approaches in dealing with illegal immigration.

But Switzerland will have harsher restrictions than the EU – if the law is approved by voters – because immigrants will only be given 12 months to bring any of their children 12 years of age and older into the country.

And anyone found in the country illegally will now face a maximum jail term of 24 months.

swissinfo, Urs Geiser

There are 1,511,937 registered foreign residents in Switzerland, 625,000 of them come from outside EU/Efta member countries. (2005 figures)

People from the Balkans and Turkey currently make up the biggest group of immigrants from outside the EU.

The percentage of immigrants in Switzerland reached a first peak before World War One (14.7%). Such a high figure was not reached again until the 1960s. It passed the 20% mark in the 1980s.

An agreement with the EU regulating the free movement of people came into force in 2002, and it was extended last year to the ten new member states.

Foreign residents in Switzerland:
EU/Efta countries: 887,187
Rest of Europe: 433,951
Asia: 87,217
Africa: 43,505
Latin America: 27,841
North America: 18,640

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