ZURICH (Reuters) – Switzerland’s parliament on Wednesday approved a motion to ban the Nazis’ swastika emblem as part of a crackdown on extremist symbols in the neutral country. The lower house of ...
The lower house of Switzerland's parliament followed in the Senate's footsteps Wednesday in voting to approve a ban on the public display, wearing and use of Nazi and other extremist, racist symbols.
GENEVAGENEVA — Switzerland’s upper house of parliament took steps Wednesday toward banning the use of racist symbols that excuse violent or extremist behavior, including speech, gestures and the ...
The National Council lower house of parliament on Wednesday voted by 133 to 38 in favour of banning the public use of racist, violence-promoting and extremist symbols, such as Nazi symbols.
The symbols are not sufficiently well-known and consumers don’t pay them enough attention, according to a study commissioned by the Federal Health Office. This content was published on May 18, 2005 ...
The Swiss Federation of Jewish Communities (SIG) called for the Swiss government to ban Nazi symbols as a first step toward banning all national socialist, racist and extremist symbols. SIG called for ...
The Swiss Federation of Jewish Communities (SIG), the umbrella organization for sixteen Jewish communities in Switzerland, applauded the decision of the Legal Commission of the National Council to ...
Beyond the individual tragedies so evident in the red-rimmed eyes and helpless wails of grieving family members who gathered at the airport in Geneva on Thursday lay a collective dismay among the ...
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