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Swiss environment minister plays down effect of European climate ruling

A European Court of Human Being Rights ruling last week that Switzerland has actually stopped working to safeguard its people from climate modification is hard to fix up with direct democracy, the Swiss environment minister said in a newspaper interview, appearing to play it down.

The Strasbourg-based court discovered in favour of more than 2,000 Swiss ladies - a 3rd of them over 75 - who stated their nation's inactiveness in the face of rising temperature levels puts them at threat of dying throughout heatwaves.

The April 9 judgment can not be appealed and the Swiss Federal Office of Justice, which represented the federal government before the court, said it must be implemented. It said it would analyse the ruling to determine the steps the country needed to take.

The judgment implies we need to describe to the Council of Europe what steps we have taken. I do not believe we require to fret about that, Environment Minister Albert Roesti said in an interview with Swiss paper Tages-Anzeiger published on Saturday, pointing to different existing efforts.

The Council of Europe is a global organisation that looks for to promote democracy and human rights and which the ECHR belongs to.

Roesti comes from the conservative Swiss People's Celebration (SVP),. which has the most seats in the lower home of parliament. After. the court ruling the SVP stated Switzerland ought to withdraw from. the Council of Europe, calling the ECHR judges puppets for. activists.

Roesti said he did not think that would be the best move.

I do not believe we ought to grant the ruling much more. attention by taking such a step. However I do ask myself how these. 2 things can be reconciled: a population that chooses by. direct democracy and a worldwide court, he said.

Switzerland regularly holds referendums on various proposed. initiatives. Roesti pointed out the example of its target of accomplishing. net no emissions by 2050, which was approved by referendum.

Swiss citizens turned down tougher steps on carbon emissions. in a referendum in 2021, nevertheless, Roesti stated.

That shows what the problem is with global courts. Judges can not overthrow that referendum, he stated.

(source: Reuters)