The Swiss foreign ministry will meet with the Israeli ambassador to reaffirm Switzerland's principled opposition to capital punishment, a diplomatic move prompted by recent efforts in Israel to expand the use of the death penalty.

"Switzerland rejects the death penalty everywhere and under all circumstances, as it is incompatible with the right to life and human dignity."
Switzerland is drawing a hard line in the sand. Next week, the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs (FDFA) will confront Israeli Ambassador Tibor Schlosser in a high-stakes diplomatic intervention that signals a deepening rift over human rights. This is not a mere courtesy call; it is a formal protest against Israelâs legislative pivot toward state-sanctioned executions. Tim Enderlin, head of the Peace and Human Rights Division, has already initiated contact, setting the stage for a face-to-face showdown in Bern. While Switzerland often prides itself on its role as a neutral mediator, this move proves that when it comes to the 'right to life,' the Alpine nation is anything but neutral. The FDFA has explicitly stated that the death penalty is 'incompatible with human dignity' in every circumstance, without exception. As Israel moves to expand its capital punishment criteria, Bern is making it clear that such a shift carries a significant diplomatic price tag.
A staggering 90-day window now stands between conviction and the gallows. Under the new legislation narrowly approved by the Israeli parliament, individuals convicted of terrorist-motivated murder intended to destroy the State of Israel could face mandatory hanging. This law, championed by far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and backed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, introduces a chilling efficiency to the judicial process in military courts. Critics are sounding the alarm, labeling the law as 'racist' and warning that it disproportionately targets Palestinian populations in the occupied territories. Switzerland is now demanding that Israel fully comply with international obligations, specifically regarding the prohibition of discrimination and the guarantees of the rule of law. The urgency is palpable: with a lawsuit already pending before Israelâs Supreme Court, the international community is watching to see if the judiciary will halt a policy that many believe violates the core tenets of modern due process.
Israel has not executed a prisoner in over 60 years. The last time the state carried out a death sentence was in 1962, when Nazi architect Adolf Eichmann was hanged for his role in the Holocaust. Since 1954, Israel had effectively abolished the death penalty for murder, reserving it only for extraordinary crimes like treason during wartime or genocide. This decades-long restraint is now being dismantled by a populist surge within the current government. By expanding the application of capital punishment to include 'terrorist-motivated' crimes, the Israeli leadership is reversing a historical precedent that has defined its judicial identity since the mid-20th century. For Switzerland, this regression is an alarming departure from the global trend toward abolition. The contrast is stark: while the world moves toward more humane sentencing, Israel is reviving a practice that had been largely relegated to the history books.
Switzerland is on a mission to kill the death penalty globally. In 2013, then-Foreign Minister Didier Burkhalter set a visionary goal: a world free of capital punishment by 2025. While that deadline has passed without total success, Bernâs resolve has only hardened. From spearheading UN resolutions alongside Mexico to condemning executive orders in the United States, Switzerland has positioned itself as the worldâs leading abolitionist voice. This latest confrontation with Israel is a calculated continuation of that crusade. By summoning the ambassador, Bern is signaling to the world that its human rights principles are not negotiable, even with close partners. The implications are clear: Switzerland will continue to use its diplomatic weight to pressure statesâregardless of their geopolitical standingâto abandon what it views as an archaic and cruel practice. As the meeting in Bern approaches, the message to Jerusalem is unmistakable: the world is watching, and Switzerland will not stay silent.