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GENEVA, SWITZERLAND – Daniel Zappelli, chief prosecutor for the canton of Geneva, has handed in his resignation, effective March 2012. He was elected in 2002 and re-elected to a second six-year term, with a mandate that would normally finish in 2014.

Zappelli has been under pressure since all four assistant prosecutors in his department quit in the past month, citing a lack of leadership and untenable work conditions. Zappelli said, in a message sent to staff today, with a copy obtained by Le Temps newspaper, that he is stepping down to remove obstacles to the correct functioning of the department.

The 47-year-old is a member of the Libéral-radical Party, whose leadership was taken totally by surprise by the announcement, reports TSR public television.

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Ikea’s grand opening, Geneva-Vernier store 15 September, follows years of wrangling

Ikea Vernier Wednesday morning, before the crowds hit the grand opening

Geneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) – The grand opening breakfast Wednesday morning 15 September at Ikea in Vernier was just the right kind: copious, with a wide selection of choices. Copious because it accompanied, Swiss-style, numerous speakers who all started by naming and thanking individually each dignitary present.

A wide selection because this is, after all, Ikea. And if the blue and yellow everywhere, including of course Ambassador Per Thoeresson’s tie, wasn’t a clue that Ikea is Swedish at heart, the glass of Schnapps at 07:00, at the end of breakfast, was a giveaway.

Sweden's ambassador to Switzerland, Per Thoeresson

“For me, like any Swede, Ikea represents Swedish values, Swedish culture,” Thoeresson told several hundred early morning breakfast guests, who thanked Sweden’s “other ambassador”, the home furnishings giant which has become an institution for foreigners in Switzerland. “It’s no accident that Switzerland was chosen as the first location in Europe outside Sweden. Switzerland is in the middle of Europe, Sweden and Switzerland share many values—including a sense of design, of functionality.” He added that the two countries “have become a little closer” thanks to Ikea.

It wasn’t always clear this would be the case.

This is the eighth Ikea store in Switzerland, but the 10-year battle to open it prompted one Geneva politician to say over breakfast that  “Ikea in Geneva at one point meant ‘obstruction’ but today it’s a good example of working together.” The commune of Vernier repeatedly refused to approve the project, saying it needed guarantees the store wasn’t giving: a major concern was the potential for traffic problems. Protestors complained about future pollution and the canton of Geneva and Vernier commune battled over the number of exits from the store.

Burying the hatchet: what Ikea will bring Vernier, Geneva

The commune finally accepted the project in October 2008, after Ikea agreed to numerous conditions, which increased the bill considerably, and construction moved ahead. Final cost: CHF109.4 million, when the attic area is included.

Opening day shows a store that had 7,000 applications for 300 jobs. Eighty percent of those hired are from canton Geneva and 40 percent from Vernier, making Ikea a key employer in the canton with Switzerland’s highest unemployment rate.

The 31,000m2 (attic included) store has a parking lot with 850 places, but it has made a serious effort to discourage shoppers’ use of private cars: it’s easy to reach using bicycle lanes and public transport: buses 6, 19, 23, 28, 57, Y and trams 14 and 16, train Regio R from Cornavin. If you’re buying furniture you can’t put on the bus, you have two relatively green options: home delivery and Mobilité natural gas rental vehicles.

Ikea is expected to bring the commune tax revenues of up to CHF800,000.

Ikea is Ikea is Ikea, but this is Geneva, where living space is at a premium

Inside the store, everything is familiar to anyone who has visited Ikea elsewhere. It is slightly smaller than the store in Aubonne and the line of merchandise is essentially the same, but the Vernier store caters to a slightly different population. “People in Geneva have a bit more money, but smaller living spaces,” one employee told visitors. The kitchen selection is larger and there are numerous clearly marked sections for people with apartments of 25, 35 or 50 square metres: small spaces.

The rare opportunity to see an Ikea store without customers charmed breakfast guests, but at 09:00 as the grand opening drew near the most impressive sight was scores of employees racing to finish shelves-stocking before the doors opened. And only one protestor showed up.

Ikea Vernier web site, with hours

TSR timeline of Ikea political battle, Vernier-Geneva

Ed. note: GenevaLunch will publish a photo gallery of the new store before it opened, late Wednesday. Watch for the update here!

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Update 19:30 Geneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) - Hannibal Qadaffi, son of Libya’s leader, who won his lawsuit for defamation of character, brought against the Geneva newspaper La Tribune de Genève and the city of Geneva, says he will continue to insist on an international tribunal to clear his name.

He filed charges after the newspaper published his police mug shot, which was leaked to it by a city employee, who remains unknown to city authorities despite a lengthy internal investigation that continues. The court noted that the photo, published 4 September 2009, was used illegally and that it offered readers no new information.

Police photos are not made public in Switzerland, where privacy laws protect those under arrest.

Qadaffi was not awarded monetary damages. He had sought CHF100,000, an amount well above that normally awarded by Swiss courts for atteints à l’honneur, a legal category broader than slander, the court pointed out, noting that in the case of the death of a spouse, the award is generally CHF30-40,000.

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Swiss newspaper says canton condemning it without justice taking its course

Geneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch.com) – Canton Geneva late Wednesday at a press conference confirmed through its lawyer that it is ready to pay a fair sum to Hannibal Qadaffi, compensating him for moral damage because a state employee appears to have been involved in leaking a police mug shot of him to the Tribune de Genève. The state noted that the action was “deplorable” and completely unacceptable, and that it will also sanction the employee, if the investigation into the leak makes it possible to determine who supplied the photo.

The state, in filing its “Memorandum” with the court hearing Qadaffi’s civil suit, filed against the canton and the newspaper in December 2009, asks the court to determine how much of the sum should be borne by Geneva and how much by the newspaper. But Tribune editor-in-chief Pierre Ruetschi Wednesday noon wrote a scathing comment on the papers the canton filed with the court.

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swiss_army_knife

Swiss army knives and more, still selling

Geneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) - The canton of Geneva moved out of its recession and into growth by the second quarter of 2009, six months ahead of the rest of Switzerland, and it now looks set to have a GDP (gross domestic product) of CHF45 million, growth of 0.5-1 percent in 2010, predicts the BCGE (Banque Cantonale de Geneve). The growth is closely linked to Geneva’s strong ties with Asian trading partners, but retail businesses have remained strong throughout the recession, and consumers are expected to lead the way with 3.5 percent growth in this area, followed by services (health, education, government and semi-public business), which account for 20 percent of cantonal GDP.

Banks are expected to show zero growth and therefore have a neutral impact on the canton’s GDP growth figures next year.

Links to other sites: BCGE, Tribune de Geneve

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Title: Expat Expo 2009
Location: Geneva, Palexpo
Link out: Click here
Description: Annual indoor information fair with 180 exhibitors, for the English-speaking international population: services, products, families welcome!
Start Time: 11:00
Date: 11 Oct 2009
End Time: 17:00

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cows_090510_ceva_090909

We're not going anywhere

Lausanne, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) – The planned light rail line connecting Cornavin-Eaux Vives-Annemasse (Ceva) was delayed again by Switzerland’s administrative high court, in a decision made public 8 September. Two of the project’s partners, canton Geneva and CFF, Swiss federal railways, had asked the court to lift about 60 injunctions against the project, arguing that the delays were costing money. The court rejected the plaintiffs’ argument, stating that the project must address the 318 different objections to the plans before it can proceed.

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Swiss households spend more moneyGeneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) – Geneva’s debt has fallen CHF 2.6 billion in the past three years to CHF 10bn, according to canton Geneva finance minister, David Hiler, in an interview with the Tribune de Genève 17 August. In 2007, Hiler says, the canton’s debt was CHF12.6bn. The reduction was possible thanks to several good years for tax receipts, a change in the law to allow public companies to put their debt on their books, and more efficient state administration, he argues. Hiler nevertheless foresees a gradual increase in the debt until 2011.

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This work by genevalunch.com is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported.