Egyptian, Chinese and Russian dissidents report being tracked and threatened in Switzerland, raising concerns about transnational repression in the human rights hub.

"I didn’t expect to experience this in Geneva. They followed me for three days in a row, right into my hotel."
"Transnational repression, particularly against human rights defenders, is a growing trend."
Geneva’s reputation as an untouchable sanctuary for the persecuted has been shattered. For decades, this city has marketed itself as the global capital of human rights, a neutral ground where safety is guaranteed. But for dissidents like Basma Mostafa, that promise is a lie. The Egyptian investigative journalist, who fled a potential 25-year prison sentence in Cairo, arrived in Switzerland expecting freedom. Instead, she found herself hunted.
In a chilling breach of security, Mostafa was stalked for three consecutive days through the streets of Geneva. The surveillance was not subtle; it was a calculated act of psychological warfare culminating inside her own hotel. "I didn’t expect to experience this in Geneva," Mostafa admits. The brazen nature of the encounter—where an operative identified himself as Egyptian security and threatened arrest on Swiss soil—exposes a terrifying reality: the long arm of authoritarianism now reaches deep into the heart of Europe.
Transnational repression is surging, and it is not limited to a single rogue state. While Mostafa’s case highlights Egyptian aggression, dissidents from China and Russia report identical patterns of intimidation within Switzerland. This is a coordinated, global assault on dissent. Phil Lynch, director of the Geneva-based International Service for Human Rights (ISHR), confirms this is a "growing trend" that activists must now factor into their survival strategies.
The tactics are brutal and sophisticated. It is not just about surveillance; it is about paralyzing critics through fear. Operatives play on the vulnerability of exiles, using their isolation in a foreign country as a weapon. In Mostafa’s case, the message was clear: you are alone, and we can touch you anywhere. By leveraging threats against families back home and physical intimidation abroad, autocratic regimes are effectively silencing voices that the Swiss government has theoretically pledged to protect.
The irony is cruel and inescapable: the very institutions that make Geneva a human rights hub also make it a hunting ground. The presence of the UN Human Rights Council and nearly every global diplomatic mission creates what experts call "fertile ground" for espionage. Under the cover of diplomatic immunity, intelligence agents from authoritarian regimes can operate with alarming freedom, mingling with the very activists they are sent to destroy.
This proximity is dangerous. The Place des Nations, often filled with protesters rallying against war and oppression, has become a theater of surveillance. When dissidents travel to Geneva to testify against atrocities, they are walking directly into the view of their tormentors. The infrastructure designed to amplify their voices is being hijacked to silence them. As long as diplomatic protocols shield these operatives, Geneva remains a paradox—a city that hosts the world's peacemakers and its most efficient silencers side by side.
Switzerland is facing a critical test of its sovereignty, and so far, the response has been underwhelming. Reports describe Swiss authorities making only "timid attempts" to address a problem that strikes at the core of national security. When foreign agents can threaten arrests in a Geneva hotel lobby without fear of immediate repercussion, Swiss neutrality begins to look like passivity.
The implications for Switzerland are severe. If the Confederation cannot guarantee the safety of those under its protection, its status as a neutral host state is compromised. This is no longer just a human rights issue; it is a security crisis. As authoritarian regimes become more emboldened, the Swiss government must decide whether it will remain a passive observer to foreign intimidation campaigns or enforce the rule of law on its own soil. The time for "timid" responses is over; the safety of International Geneva demands action.