Swiss voters back ban on minarets in referendum

The Swiss news agency ATS and other media said about 57.5  per cent of voters and all but four of the 26 cantons approved  the proposal in the nationwide referendum, which was backed by  the right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP).

The government and parliament had rejected the initiative as  violating the Swiss constitution, freedom of religion and the  country’s cherished tradition of tolerance. The government had  said a ban could “serve the interests of extremist circles.“

The government said it would respect the people’s decision  and construction of new minarets would no longer be permitted.

“Muslims in Switzerland are able to practise their religion  alone or in community with others and live according to their  beliefs just as before,” it said in a statement.

Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said the outcome of  the vote reflected a fear of Islamic fundamentalism, but the ban  was “not a feasible means of countering extremist tendencies”.

“I am assuming our trade relations with other countries will  become more difficult,” she told a news conference in Berne.

“We’ll see the consequences in the export sector and  possibly in the area of tourism. In recent years we’ve seen  particular growth (in tourism) from Gulf states, it helped us a  lot, and how that develops we’ll have to see,” she added.

The Alpine country of nearly 7 million is home to more than  300,000 Muslims, mainly from Bosnia, Kosovo and Turkey.

A group of politicians from the SVP, the country’s biggest  party, and the conservative Federal Democratic Union gathered  enough signatures to force the referendum on the initiative.

Its campaign poster showed the Swiss flag covered in  missile-like minarets and the portrait of a woman covered with a  black chador and veil associated with strict Islam.

Four mosques of Switzerland’s estimated 130 to 160 Muslim  cultural and prayer centres, have minarets. The call to prayer  is banned in the country.