Rosie51
^The Reuters article said this has been stopped- the one you posted. Did you not read it?^
Kali2 Yes I did read it, did you? It said the 10% confiscation of earnings from refugees for up to 10 years was stopping from the start of 2018 but continued Switzerland will still require arriving asylum seekers to turn over to the state assets they have worth more than 1,000 Swiss francs ($1,014) to help offset costs they trigger, the State Secretariat for Migration said in response to an enquiry.
As far as I'm aware the UK does not do this, I'd be very upset if they did and would campaign to have it stopped. It is not racist to examine the policies of other countries. Nationality isn't race anyway.
The racism I'm presently getting concerned about is the accounts on the BBC website of black and Asian students trying to flee Ukraine being discriminated against by some racist officials.
Yes, Rosie. I have replied. In Switzerland (and it has nothing to do with this thread at all btw... but I will respond) it is the norm, for all people who receive social aid, in the form of basic wage, free healthcare, accommodation, etc, to repay a percentage of the help given, once they have a job, or receive funds like inheritance, etc. As explained, this is the NORM, for all Swiss, nationals or residents- and therefore, refugees too. Once they settle, and have a job and can repay a little over a long period of time. Just like students loans in the UK. It would be wrong for it not to be the case, if Swiss residents and Nationals are expected to do so.
I have been told on this site, again and again, and by many posters, not just on this thread, that I do not have a right to an opinion, as I was not born here, and have gone back to my country of birth to look after my very elderly parents. Was told today 'to put a sock in it' - and others have been digging dirt on Switzerland to throw back at me. As said, if someone who has been a British citizen for 52 years, and totally integrated- is treated like this, than yes, I do wonder how you treat real foreigners. And over a period of years, the above comments do add up to some form of bullying racism. Simple- fact.
If you were told in France, or in Italy or wherever- after becoming a full citizen of that country and living there all your adult life, with very strong ties to that country- that you were not allowed an opinion because you were born in UK and still retained UK citizenship - I think you would perceive it as the same.