Nobody, absolutely nobody, would have ever thought that being an animal may be a preferable life option to being a human. Well, maybe aliens. But I doubt so much if those aliens attempted to live in Switzerland before making such life-changing, form-altering decisions.
This country is wired in a weirdly different way in everything, and its pet-owning and management system is no exception. It would make you reconsider your life choices. Like, am I in the right living form? Is this the best I can do for myself? Is existing as a human being not overhyped and overrated? Should I not instead consult with the witch covens in Edo state, and get powers that can transform me into a bird so I can enjoy all these pet privileges in Switzerland? Or should I just volunteer to be adopted from an animal shelter?
The right to mingle with peers
When I learned that the pet population in this country is 2.5 million, versus the people population (which is 8.7 million), I thought to myself: Oh, that is nice! But then I realize that Switzerland treats this additional 18 percent of their population as an offshoot of the entire human population. This is the only explanation that can suffice for the ‘crème-de-la-crème’ regulations and frameworks that surrounds owning a pet in Switzerland.
To start with, shebi you people know that pet owners pay ‘ownership’ tax abi? (I had to go all Nigerian to fully express this one). Only cat owners are exempted. Tax for owning a pet? Does this mean that after paying an average tax rate of 18.5 percent for myself, I still pay additional tax for owning a dog that I am feeding, clothing, and taking for a walk in the coldest of winters? And cleaning its poop every day? Yups, that is EXACTLY what is meant.
After that, Swiss Animal Protection laws specify that it is not ideal for me to have only one pet. Two or more is the recommendation. This is because if I have only one pet, I MUST ensure that it has daily contact with people or daily visual contact with its kind.
Wow! Just like that, I have been discriminated against and screened out of pet ownership in this country.
Do you know why? Because I am a couch potato! If I enter my apartment on a Friday evening and lock my front door, 9 out of 10 times, I am not reopening that door again until Monday morning. There is no Swiss law that fights for my rights to mingle with people. There is no law to ensure that I, the human being make visual contact with humans of my kind every day (I probably should not complain about this one!).
Follow Medinat, as she chronicles the lived experience of a Nigerian living in Switzerland. With a mixture of humour, satire, story-telling and metaphorical symbolism, Medinat’s monthly highlights will reveal to you Switzerland and the Swiss in ways you never knew, never imagined, or never noticed. She is after all living her new Swiss life the Nigerian (Naija) way. Medinat is a Senior Lecturer at the ETH Zurich.
Need a passport? Become a dog!
Furthermore, Switzerland is the ONLY country that requires that some pets – especially dogs – should hold a valid passport (hahahaha) and be registered in a database. If the dog gets its passport based on the nationality of its owner, this means that on its first day of assuming a ‘pet position’, a dog can get a Swiss passport while non-dogs (basically you and me) have to wait for 10 years to get this. A classic definition of “all animals are not equal”, lol!
And the database registration is for what exactly? Is this so that if the dog poops in a public place and you, the owner, do not pick up the poop for proper disposal, the dog could be traced, and you as the owner could get arrested?
Imagine getting arrested not for a crime you committed, but for a crime committed by your pet! Ha, God! My mother will have a heart attack! I can hear her voice already in my head saying to me: “You left your own country only to get arrested in a foreign land because of a dog? How will I explain your arrest to your father’s people? You are such a disgrace!”
Cushions and insurance
Then comes the personal liability insurance that is required to be carried for ownership of many pets. The minimum coverage is 1 million CHF. At this point, my question is: How much exactly is life insurance for human beings, please?
Animal experts say that in the first year of owning a pet, you could spend as much as 2’000 CHF on them. Premium life. What we refer to as ‘soft life’ in Nigeria. Premium enjoyment. Premium luxury. Premium everything cushioned with a big fat insurance and a Swiss passport, where you can travel to 155 countries, visa-free. That is what is guaranteed as a pet in this country.
If you have a chance in your next life, don’t think twice about it. Life as a human being is tough! Take it from someone who has been a human for so long. Choose wisely. Come and live this Swiss Life the Naija way… but as a pet.
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