What I am painfully trying to convey to you, is the following:
Example: An individual from Saudi Arabia, where the government prohibits the public practice of religions other than Islam, obtains a residency permit in Switzerland. This individual is now guaranteed all of the rights and freedoms as any other resident, as one would expect. [Please read that last sentence several times or have someone read it to you, if necessary.] What is hypocritcal, is that this same individual who now has all of these rights and freedom to practice their religion within Switzerland, denies these very same rights and freedoms to individuals within their country of origin (Saudi Arabia).
Example 2: An individual from Egypt, where government regulations require all non-Muslims to obtain presidential decrees before building or repairing a place of worship (amended in 1999 but still very difficult), obtains a residency permit in Switzerland. This individual is now guaranteed all of the rights and freedoms as any other resident, as one would expect. [Please read that last sentence several times or have someone read it to you, if necessary.] What is hypocritcal, is that this same individual who now has all of these rights and freedoms to practice their religion within Switzerland, denies these very same rights and freedoms to individuals within their country of origin (Egypt).
As the original post of this entire thread was in regards to the banning of Muslim minarets within Switzerland, I made the reference to Human Rights issues in predominently Islamic nations in response to someone's post. If the respective populations within these Islamic nations refuse to initiate change within their own countries, then why should it come as a surprise that someone would label them as being 'hypocrites' when they start raising issues in regards to their Freedom of Religion within a new country (Switzerland). Despite the fact that they are now fully entitled to these new-found rights, it is still hypocritical.