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Swiss voters reject plan to expel foreigners for minor crimes | |
(about 5 hours later) | |
People in Switzerland have rejected a plan to automatically expel foreigners who commit minor crimes, results show. | |
Some 59% of voters have said "No" to the proposal put forward by the right-wing Swiss People's Party. | |
The vote happened amid growing unease at rising immigration and the problems which, the party says, come with it. | |
But opponents said the law would create a two-tier justice system unfairly targeting foreigners, who make up around 25% of Switzerland's population. | But opponents said the law would create a two-tier justice system unfairly targeting foreigners, who make up around 25% of Switzerland's population. |
Almost two million foreign passport holders live permanently and legally in Switzerland, but as gaining Swiss nationality is a complicated and expensive procedure, and is not conferred automatically at birth, these foreign nationals include many who have never lived outside of Switzerland. | Almost two million foreign passport holders live permanently and legally in Switzerland, but as gaining Swiss nationality is a complicated and expensive procedure, and is not conferred automatically at birth, these foreign nationals include many who have never lived outside of Switzerland. |
The Swiss government says only two in every 100 foreigners living in Switzerland have been granted Swiss citizenship. | The Swiss government says only two in every 100 foreigners living in Switzerland have been granted Swiss citizenship. |
Opinion polls initially suggested the proposal would get support, but the mood among voters shifted in the last weeks of the campaign. | |
More than five million people were entitled to vote in the referendum; only Swiss nationals get to vote. | More than five million people were entitled to vote in the referendum; only Swiss nationals get to vote. |
Analysis: BBC's Imogen Foulkes, in Geneva | |
This result is a major blow for the right wing Swiss People's Party. | |
The high turnout, over 60%, and the big majority against the deportation proposal show clearly that voters think the party has gone too far. | |
The proposal to automatically deport foreigners, many of whom were born in Switzerland, for minor offences such as speeding, was viewed as highly discriminatory. | |
The size of the defeat over deportation is likely to force the Swiss People's Party to reconsider similar policies, which it has been planning to put to nationwide votes. | |
In 2010 the Swiss approved measures to deport foreigners convicted of murder or sexual violence. | |
The proposal rejected on Sunday included automatic deportation with no right of appeal if a foreigner committed two minor offences within 10 years such as speeding or arguing with a police officer. | |
The changes would have created some of the strictest laws on foreigners in Europe. |