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Posters in favour of the referendum at a Zurich train station show a black sheep being kicked off the Swiss flag by a white sheep.

Switzerland rejects proposal to deport foreigners for minor crimes

If passed, the controversial referendum would have seen foreign nationals found guilty of two lower-level infractions in the space of 10 years being expelled from the country.

Updated: 9.25am

SWISS VOTERS HAVE rejected a proposal to automatically deport foreign criminals for even minor offences.

The results of yesterday’s referendum came at a time when many European countries are hardening their attitudes to migrants after more than a million arrived on the continent’s shores last year.

Under Swiss law, voters can change a law by popular ballot. To be passed it must be approved by a majority of cantons as well as a majority of electors.

According to the final results yesterday evening, the proposal to “automatically deport foreign criminals” was rejected by 58.9% of voters.

In a referendum six years ago, more than half of Swiss voters backed strengthening rules to automatically expel foreign nationals convicted of violent or sexual crimes.

The populist right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP) – which has accused parliament of dragging its feet on writing the text into law and watering it down when it did so last March – proposed tougher rules which were put to the people in yesterday’s referendum.

Known for its virulent campaigns against immigration, the European Union and Islam, the SVP had called for “real deportation of criminal foreigners”.

But the initiative faced stiff opposition, including from the government, parliament and all the other major political parties, which said it circumvented fundamental rules of democracy.

Tough rules 

If passed, the proposal would have dramatically increased the number of offences that can get foreign nationals automatically kicked out of Switzerland, including misdemeanours usually punishable with short prison sentences or fines.

It would also have removed a judge’s right to refrain from deportation in cases where it would cause the foreign national “serious personal hardship”.

More than 50,000 people including hundreds of celebrities signed a petition against the proposal.

According to the Swiss Federal Statistical Office, the number of people who could have been expelled from the country under the proposed draft would have shot up from 500 to 10,200.

Switzerland Swiss vs Europe File photo: A bus passes by an election poster from the Swiss People's Party demanding a stop for immigration. Anja Niedringhaus / AP/Press Association Images Anja Niedringhaus / AP/Press Association Images / AP/Press Association Images

SVP’s campaign initially garnered strong support, but appeared to have lost steam among voters.

Opponents had warned that if the text passed, people born to foreign parents in Switzerland risked being deported to countries they have never lived in, just for petty offences.

Parliament last year approved changes to the penal code, but also determined that judges should have the right to avoid automatic deportation in certain cases.

The initiative under scrutiny yesterday would have widened the list of offences that trigger automatic deportation.

Any foreigner found guilty of two lower-level infractions — including fighting, money laundering, giving false testimony and indecent exposure — in the space of 10 years would have been expelled.

According to the Federal Statistics Office, an average of 500 people were deported in 2014.

Were the penal code changes approved last year in force, that figure would have been 3,900. And on the basis of the measures proposed by the SVP, it would have risen to 10,200.

First published: 28 February

- © AFP, 2016

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