Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:
Swiss voters have given a strong approval to a law on new surveillance powers for the intelligence agencies.
The new law would allow the authorities to tap phones, snoop on email and deploy hidden cameras and bugs.
It would help Switzerland catch up with other countries, supporters say.
Opponents have feared it could erode civil liberties and put Swiss neutrality at risk by requiring closer co-operation with foreign intelligence agencies.
Some 65.5% of voters agreed to accept the proposal. It will allow the Federal Intelligence Service and other agencies to put suspects under electronic surveillance if authorised by a court, the defence ministry and the cabinet.
The big vote in favour of new powers for the intelligence services shows just how concerned the Swiss have become about a possible militant attack.
For decades, ever since a scandal in the 1980s in which Switzerland's government was revealed to have been spying on tens of thousands of its citizens, the Swiss have been sceptical about state surveillance. CCTV cameras are rare; even Google Street View is restricted because of Swiss privacy laws.
But the dreadful events in neighbouring France have changed many Swiss minds. Despite arguments from opponents that increased surveillance would not automatically increase security, voters handed huge new powers to their intelligence services.
The Swiss government says the powers would be used about once a month to monitor the highest-risk suspects.
The new law was not comparable to the spying capabilities of the US or other major powers, which "go well beyond what is desired in terms of individual liberty and security for our citizens", Defence Minister Guy Parmelin said earlier this year.
(Score: 2) by butthurt on Monday September 26 2016, @01:56PM
The initiative didn't seek to institute surveillance powers. Rather, the parliament had "passed overwhelmingly" a law instituting the new powers; the initiative was started by people who wanted that law repealed.
http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/intelligence-law_reform-on-intelligence-law-to-go-forward/41940960 [swissinfo.ch]