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New gun law stands for ‘more safety and prosperity’

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The European restrictions imposed on Swiss gun ownership are reasonable, and failure to accept them on May 19 could spell the end of Switzerland’s participation in EU security and asylum schemes, warns Pascal Vuichard of the ‘Army officers for Schengen’ committee.

The security of Swiss citizens is closely linked to our membership of the SchengenExternal link single border area, as well as the DublinExternal link convention on migration and asylum.

Access to the European database on convicted criminal offenders is indispensible for our police and border guards in fulfilling their daily work. 

If we reject the revised gun control directive, however, we will jeopardise Switzerland’s membership of both the Schengen and Dublin agreements.

Pascal Vuichard
Pascal Vuichard is a leading member of the centrist Liberal Green Party and is involved in local politics in the canton of Glarus. He is currently writing his PhD thesis in business administration at the University of St Gallen. Vuichard is also a lieutenant in the Swiss militia army and leads the ‘Army officers for Schengen’ committee, which campaigns for a reform of Swiss gun law. @PascalVuichard

The consequences of a sudden suspension of the accords are anything but desirable: as well as losing access to the above-mentioned Schengen Information System (SIS)External link, where people on wanted lists throughout Europe are recorded, every person and every vehicle would once again have to be systematically checked at border crossings. 

Swiss solution

But there is a solution: the outcome of discussions on the revised gun control directive, where the government and parliament managed to win a special deal in negotiations launched in 2013 with other Schengen member states, is a good compromise.

This gun control directive respects the peculiarities of Swiss gun traditions: our militia army members can continue to take home their assault rifles, while private marksmen can freely practice the sport of target shooting; they can also continue to freely buy or sell weapons. Hunters are not affected at all.

The revised gun law shows that Switzerland can have its way, as long as it still has a say, in Brussels.

swissinfo.ch publishes op-ed articles by contributors writing on a wide range of topics – Swiss issues or those that impact Switzerland. The selection of articles presents a diversity of opinions designed to enrich the debate on the issues discussed.

On the other hand, the small restrictions introduced to the gun law are perfectly reasonable. 

Registration is now required for the approval of semi-automatic weapons with large magazines: for example, sub-machine guns converted to semi-automatic weapons. Should the safety of our population be put at risk because we don’t want such a change? I don’t think so.

Meanwhile, Schengen stands not only for safety, but also prosperity. For example, leaving the single border Schengen space would have serious consequences for exports and tourism. 

We are used to traveling around Europe without showing our passport. Today, more than 2,100,000 people cross in or out of Switzerland every day. But without membership of Schengen, there would be no systematic cooperation with our neighbours, something that would inevitably lead to big difficulties at the border.

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Economic disaster

This would be disastrous for our export-driven economy, our jobs, and indeed for coexistence with our neighbours! We also, of course, welcome tourists from all over the world, who thanks to the Schengen visa can easily visit our beautiful country. Hoteliers and local businesses would struggle much more without these foreign tourists.

Finally, thanks to Schengen we can now also send back asylum seekers who have already applied for asylum in another Schengen/Dublin country. This would no longer be possible were we no longer to remain in the scheme.

It’s clear: the advantages of Schengen speak for themselves. We all enjoy and benefit from a high level of security and prosperity in our country, and we want to continue to do so in the future.

The only sensible thing to do is to approve the updated gun control regulations.

The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author, and do not necessarily reflect the views of swissinfo.ch.

Adapted from German/urs

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