Author: switzerlandtimes.ch

Swiss voters will decide whether to ban most fireworks after campaigners rejected a parliamentary compromise and insisted on putting their initiative to a nationwide vote, reported RTS. The proposal, launched by animal-welfare organisations, seeks to protect people, animals and the environment from the noise, air pollution and other emissions caused by fireworks. It would prohibit the sale and use of almost all fireworks, while allowing cantons to grant exemptions for major events of regional or national importance. The initiative committee confirmed on Friday that it would not withdraw the proposal after Parliament failed last week to agree on a counter-proposal.…

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This week, the Swiss Tenants’ Association submitted a popular initiative aimed at curbing rents after collecting more than 140,000 signatures. The proposal would require rents to be reviewed automatically at regular intervals. If a review found rents to be too high, landlords would be obliged to reduce them. The initiative is backed by an alliance of left-wing parties, trade unions and advocacy groups, including the Socialist Party. The association argues that housing costs have become an unsustainable burden for many households. Nearly 40% of tenants spend more than one-third of their income on rent, it says, making housing the largest…

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Alona Shevtsova, CEO of Sends, will moderate a panel at The Blockchain show on 29th June, bringing together experts from entertainment, location-based gaming, and content localisation to examine what it takes to build sustainable gaming ecosystems across emerging markets. The panel, titled “Global Gaming Expansion: Lessons from Untapped Markets,” will structure its discussion across four themes: the growth dynamics reshaping emerging gaming markets; the role of localisation in creating experiences that genuinely connect with new audiences; the infrastructure and communities needed to build gaming ecosystems beyond the game itself; and the lessons and opportunities that will define successful expansion in…

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Switzerland is enduring its tenth consecutive day of temperatures above 30°C, placing this June among the hottest on record. The month began cool but turned hot. Temperatures rose sharply from the middle of the month, with much of the country surpassing 30°C on June 16th and 17th. The prolonged heat invites comparisons with the exceptional summers of 2003 and 2018, both of which left lasting marks on the country’s environment and agriculture. The current heat wave already surpasses records in some places. Geneva, Bern, Zurich and Lugano have each recorded ten days above 30°C—already more than during the heat wave…

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Switzerland’s electorate is ageing rapidly. New calculations by the liberal think tank Avenir Suisse show that the median age of those who vote in nationwide referendums is now about 60. In other words, half of active voters are older than 60. Since 2000 the median age has risen by seven years. That makes the active electorate increasingly distinct from the broader population. The median age in Switzerland is about 43; among eligible voters it is 53.5. Those who actually cast ballots are more than six years older. Elections and referendums are therefore increasingly decided by people approaching retirement or already…

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Food security occupies a special place in Swiss political culture. During the second world war, Switzerland launched the Wahlen Plan, a drive to expand domestic food production in anticipation of a possible blockade. The programme became part of the country’s collective memory and continues to shape debates about agriculture. Advocates of greater self-sufficiency frequently invoke this tradition of preparedness and national resilience. Yet the means matter as much as the ends. Efforts to reconcile higher self-sufficiency with environmental goals have run into political resistance, reports RTS. One proposal seeks to reduce agriculture’s environmental footprint while increasing domestic food production by…

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Switzerland recorded fewer births and marriages in 2025, extending demographic trends that have become increasingly pronounced over the past decade. According to the Federal Statistical Office (FSO), 78,200 children were born in Switzerland in 2025, around 100 fewer than a year earlier. Although the decline was marginal, it marked the fourth consecutive annual fall in births. The pace of decline has slowed compared with previous years, but the broader direction remains unchanged. Over the past decade, Switzerland’s demographic slowdown has become increasingly apparent. Annual births have fallen by almost 10%, from around 86,600 in 2015 to 78,200 in 2025. Fertility…

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In modern finance, financial capital is often viewed as the ultimate resource. Yet some of the most successful investors, entrepreneurs, family offices, and business leaders increasingly recognize another form of capital that can be equally valuable: relationship capital. While markets continue to evolve through technology, artificial intelligence, automation, and digital communication, many of the world’s most significant business opportunities still originate through trusted relationships built over time. For firms operating internationally, those relationships frequently become the foundation for investments, strategic partnerships, cross-border expansion, business development initiatives, and access to opportunities that may never reach the public market. This reality has…

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Switzerland is often held up as a model of multilingualism. In August 2025, however, its linguistic diversity nearly led to a railway collision. The incident received widespread attention only after the Swiss Transportation Safety Investigation Board (SESE) published its report in June 2026. Two Swiss Rail trains came close to colliding at Neuchâtel-Vauseyon after a breakdown in communication between German-speaking train drivers and French-speaking traffic controllers. A freight train stopped just 50 metres short of an empty regional train that had entered its path. According to the SESE, the regional train’s two German-speaking drivers failed to understand instructions issued in…

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Young Swiss men will soon face tighter restrictions on opting for civilian service instead of compulsory military duty after voters approved a reform in Sunday’s referendum (Yes: 52.5%; No: 47.5%). The new rules are expected to enter into force in mid-2027. Swiss civilian service was approved by voters in 1992 and introduced in 1996 for conscientious objectors unwilling to perform military service. Until 2009, applicants had to convince a review panel that their objections were genuine. That requirement was later replaced with a simpler system under which civilian service lasts one-and-a-half times longer than the remaining military obligation. The government…

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