Switzerland is still a target for militants despite so far avoiding attacks like those in Germany and France.
The government is examining whether to require employees of private companies who manage asylum cases to report clients’ possible extremist behaviour to authorities.
The government clearly should implement a reporting system in the interests of national security. The people of Switzerland have already given ample indication of their willingness to unite in the fight against jihad:
Last year, Swiss voters agreed to extend the intelligence service’s authority to monitor internet traffic, deploy drones and hack foreign computer systems, in large part to counter extremist threats.
A “clear majority of Swiss voters” agreed to “an overhaul of the confederation’s spying powers.” One remaining strategy that needs to be implemented in Switzerland, and, in fact, throughout the West: the monitoring of mosques where imams are discovered to be preaching hate and inciting violence against the infidel. Catholic churches were surveiled to flush out the Mafia: “agents even admit to dropping snooping devices into a confessional at a Roman Catholic church frequented by mobsters, as well as a church candlestick holder and a church men’s room.” Even Pope Francis back in May took a hard, zero-tolerance stand and “excommunicated all Mafia from the Catholic Church, a first in the Church’s history,” despite his ongoing other position of tolerance and appeasement toward jihadists.
“Swiss monitor 500 people for online jihadist propaganda”, Swissinfo.ch, March 14, 2017:
Last year the Federal Intelligence Service (FIS) identified almost 500 people accused of spreading jihadist propaganda online, according to a report published on Tuesday. A national plan to fight radicalisation in Switzerland is currently being finalised.
According to the latest report by the federal intelligence task force TETRA, formed in 2014 to address “jihad travellers” moving between Switzerland and the Middle East, Switzerland is still a target for militants despite so far avoiding attacks like those in Germany and France.
“The most likely threat for our country is attacks that require little logistical planning and are carried out by lone attackers or small groups,” the report stated.
At the end of 2016, 497 people were being monitored by the FIS for spreading online jihadist propaganda in Switzerland or for using the country as a base for such activities. However, not all of these people are considered a threat to security, the report noted. Of 70 cases being investigated by federal police, about 60 are the subjects of a criminal proceeding.
Intelligence agents also examined 5,202 asylum dossiers for possible threats to Swiss internal security, from the 27,200 people who submitted asylum requests last year, the report went on.
The service recommended rejecting 14 of those cases, as well as taking refugee status from one other person who had already been granted asylum.
That compared with 4,910 dossiers being examined in 2015 from 39,500 asylum requests. Of 24,000 asylum requests in 2014, the Swiss intelligence service reviewed only 2,488 files.
Last year the Federal Police Office also issued 122 people with entry bans, of whom 107 were suspected of committing terror acts or of supporting banned groups.