The Swiss Federal Migration Office reckons that in the first six months of 2012, thirty per cent more Spaniards came looking for work in Switzerland, compared to last year.
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Although the increase seems dramatic, it’s still not a mass phenomenon, underline Swiss authorities. Many unemployed live in precarious situations, camping for example, like Nicolas and Victor.
If they stay for less than three months, they don’t even need a short time permit. One third of these people work in construction, six per cent in the agriculture sector and the rest in hotels and restaurants. (swissinfo.ch/RSI)
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Justice Minister Simonetta Sommaruga said the move was part of a package of long-term measures to control the flow of people entering Switzerland amid pressure from political parties to limit immigration. Under the decision taken on Wednesday, B resident permits for people from Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Slovakia as well as the three…
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In Spain, one in two young people is jobless and, for the first time since 1990, the number of people emigrating in 2011 is higher than those immigrating. After an economic boom at the beginning of the century, Spain and Portugal slid into a deep crisis in 2008 which has seen unemployment rise to 22.9…
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