On 30 November, Switzerland’s voters will decide whether to pass a controversial amendment put forth by Ecopop, a group of Swiss environmentalists. The initiative calls for boosting birth control in developing countries as a way to curb immigration, which according to the group shouldn’t exceed 0.2 per cent of the Swiss population over three years. While the campaign gathered over 120,000 signatures in 2012, it now faces tough opposition from the government, the business community and trade unions, who argue the initiative is too strict.
40-50 Swiss family-owned hotels under threat of closing
Family-owned hotels across Switzerland are striving to compete with larger ones. According to Swiss Info, an estimated 40 to 50 hotels are expected to close in alpine areas over the next few years, largely because they fail to target their guests properly, said Director of Tourism Jürg Schmid. The challenges are mostly financial, as many smaller hotels cannot afford expansion or renovation, but factors such as this past summer’s unfavourable weather could also be blamed.
Switzerland calls for global death penalty ban
Earlier this month, Swiss President Didier Burkhalter joined 11 foreign ministers around the world in a joint declaration in favour of abolishing the death penalty. “The death penalty is incompatible with human rights,†the Swiss government said in a statement last week.
While Switzerland abolished the death penalty from its federal criminal law in 1942, it formulated a broader strategy last year to promote global abolition, or at least to secure a stay of all current executions, by 2025.
Alexandra Torrealba
Federer masters China
Swiss tennis player Roger Federer (33) won his first Shanghai Masters title in China on 12 October, with a straight set of victories over 29-year-old French player Gilles Simon. Federer, a 17-time Gland Slam winner, won the game after Simon hit a forehand into the net, giving him a 7-6 (8-6) 7-6 (7-2) victory. “To win the biggest tournament in Asia is a treat,†said Federer. “I got lucky to come through the first round after saving five match points. It’s been a dream week.â€
Alexandra Torrealba
Cause Direct: Not your average crowd-funding site

Cause Direct’s CEO, Patrick Vieljeux
Dozens of people gathered last week at Geneva’s Impact Hub to celebrate the launch of one of Switzerland’s newest non-profit organizations: Cause Direct, an online platform that serves to connect certified NGOs worldwide with interested funders and investors.
The concept behind the site isn’t a novelty. Thousands of people around the globe use websites such as Razoo.com or GoFundMe.com as vehicles to raise funds for social events, personal causes, charities and even expensive medical bills.
Cause Direct, however, is moving in a different direction. While online fundraising is their framework, Patrick Vieljeux, the non-profit’s CEO and founder, insists Cause Direct is “not a crowd-funding platform like you might find in the United States.â€
“What differentiates us from those platforms is that we are a non-profit ourselves,†said Vieljeux in an interview with Le News. “We redistribute all our profits to the charities registered to our platform, which mechanically lowers their cost of fundraising. Our objective is to become the web’s cheapest platform; we anticipate by 2016 to charge something below three percent, which is much lower than the cheapest platform today.â€
As a Swiss “Société à Responsabilité Limitéeâ€, or limited liability company, Cause Direct does not charge the donor for their gift, but instead charges each charity a 5% success fee every quarter on the amount raised. Then, after covering its costs, Cause Direct redistributes its revenue surplus back to the charities.
One of the benefits of this system for the charities, Vieljeux explains, is that the transaction takes place without an intermediary, and the charity directly receives the funds gifted. Charities only pay based on the funds raised, minimizing their financial risks.
“Knocking on the doors of big and small companies for funding is an extremely tiring and time-consuming activity,†said Jan Hellman, founder of the Non-Violence Project Foundation, during his presentation at Cause Direct’s launch party. “Cause Direct allows us to raise funds in a different and exciting way.â€
Additionally, thanks to Cause Direct’s business-to-business model, charities also benefit from the platform’s several corporate partners, who can participate in employee grant-matching programs and create profiles on the platform to easily manage their corporate-giving goals.
“Traditional companies right now want to include social dimensions in their business,†Vieljeux said. “We get most of our audience from company employees. We expect to have 2.7 million users by the end of the first quarter next year, with eight companies already on board.â€
On the donor side, Cause Direct allows donors to give funds to a targeted project, such as a school-building project in Cambodia, as long as it is managed by a certified NGO. As a result, the donor is able to direct their funds to a cause more aligned with their interests instead of a general NGO.
Risks for the donor are also minimized and the process is kept transparent due to a selective screening process that all charities and projects are submitted to before being admitted to the platform. Société Générale de Surveillance, a world-leading certification company, has partnered with Cause Direct to define a rigorous selection protocol that verifies a charity’s accountability, sustainability, performance and stakeholders, among others.
“To be able to register a project, you must be either (1) a certified NGO, (2) managed by a certified NGO, or (3) a company. If you have a project where you want to raise money for a friend who needs surgery, you unfortunately can’t do it here,†Vieljeux explained, stressing the importance of avoiding fraud and “making sure the money goes to the right place.â€
Donors can also review each charity’s performance report, submitted by the charities themselves, every six months. “They see what they give, where it goes and how it is used,†Vieljeux added.
On the day of the launch, the platform had already admitted and registered 50 charities and projects, 25 of which were already posted online, ready to join what Vieljeux calls a “revolution†in online giving.
“Social entrepreneurship is a growing phenomenon. It is really a big revolution,†said Vieljeux. “I believe the capital system is going nowhere and there is a new economy emerging, more circular and distributive.â€
With this new economy also comes the concept of faster smartphone or tablet donations, especially during emergencies. Cause Direct plans to revolutionize emergency relief by launching a program at the end of this year that alerts a donor when disaster strikes, sending to their mobile devices a link to a donation page that lists all the NGOs that are working on the ground.
“It will help reduce the time of reaction to 48 hours, which is paramount in disaster relief, and all charities that receive funds will have to report every 15 days how they used them,†Vieljeux said.
While Vieljeux currently works with three other people on the platform, he intends to hire more professionals, including a business developer and an analyst, to create a team of 12 full-time employees by the end of 2016.
For the same year, Vieljeux also hopes to have six million site users, as well as an equivalent of 40 million dollars raised, with one clear goal in mind.
“My objective is to make people realize that they can indeed change the world. You have to try, you have to dare, but it is really a matter of changing your mindset,†Vieljeux said. “You can do fantastic things if you just put your mind to it.â€
Alexandra Torrealba
The Geneva International Film Festival: Tous Écrans
Celebrating its 20th anniversary, the international ‘Tous Écrans’ festival will feature 131 film and TV shows from 6-13November. The gathering will take over the heart of Geneva in Plainpalais’s art nouveau Pitoëff community hall, where two projection rooms will promote 44 Swiss and two European premieres, plus eight international and 10 World premieres. Canada is this year’s “guest†or featured country.
A new highlight, the “Film and Beyond†prize, will be awarded to French actor and screenwriter Jean-Hugues Anglade. Pitoëff will also host the works of artist François Moncarey, whose digital installations skilfully combine art, humanity, and recent technology. Other innovative installations will be featured, notably a drive-in cinema in Pitoëff’s courtyard. Here residents can sit in cars, especially brought in for the occasion, to watch an array of cult TV shows from the 1990s on the big screen. Viewers will be encouraged to envision and pitch their own series, with the best one to be announced during the festival.
Festival goers can further enjoy interactive stations and areas dedicated to digital culture, such as a conference room with Workflow, an international platform that attracts hundreds of professionals and is dedicated to audio-visual arts. They can also experience Oculus Rift, a 3D virtual reality headset considered the future of cinema. The trendiest local DJs will liven the midnight programme throughout the weekend. Tous Écrans has joined La Lanterne Magique and Mission Ciné to host family-friendly fare on Sunday, so that even the youngest aficionados can enjoy a taste of real cinema.
For further information: www.tous-ecrans.com
Alexandra Torrealba