Saturday, December 04, 2010

Who will teach the Swiss to realize that they are tough against petty criminals while showing a blind eye on corporate crime?
The popular initiative for a constitutional amendment on the expulsion of criminal foreigners ("Ausschaffungs-Initiative") which has won a narrow majority of the vote last weekend (the negative outcome in the cities where foreigners are present has been overruled by the majority in the countryside where foreigners are rare) will have to be treated in parliament where modifications on details will be possible.
Since the amendment obliges criminal courts to compulsory expulsion of foreigners convicted for murder and robbery, but also for a series of petty crimes such as non declaration of small amounts of income in housekeeping personal, the parliamentary discussion will be an interesting one.
Will the catalogue be expanded to include criminal activities in economy and finance?
So far, Swiss voters have shown a blind eye on organized crime which in the past has great quantities of capital into our bank accounts and are unwilling to reduce inequality which has risen to heights never seen in the past.
Unfortunately, corruption is lingering in a country which is regularly praised for it's competitivity and it's corruption-free public institutions, under the umbrella of one of the most important, if not the most important international sports organization, the FIFA, and it's president, Mr. Joseph Blatter, who cannnot be expulsed under the new constitutional amendment - because he is a Swiss citizen.

It will be very interesting to follow the debate on detailed regulations based on the constitutional amendment in parliament.

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