A report from the National Commission for the Prevention of Torture warns that severe overcrowding in Swiss prisons is infringing on inmates' fundamental rights, increasing violence, and straining staff. The commission urges a comprehensive strategy to reduce the prison population rather than simply building more cells.

"Simply building more detention places is not a solution."
Switzerland’s reputation for humanitarian excellence is clashing with a grim reality: its prisons are bursting at the seams. The National Commission for the Prevention of Torture (NCPT) issued a blistering annual report on June 29, 2026, warning that overcrowding has reached a critical threshold. This isn't just a matter of cramped quarters; it is a systemic failure that is actively deteriorating prison conditions across the Confederation. High occupancy rates are no longer a seasonal fluctuation but a permanent strain that grapples with the very foundations of the Swiss legal system. As the population within these walls surges, the infrastructure designed to rehabilitate is instead becoming a pressure cooker for tension and instability.
Fundamental rights are being compromised every single day as inmates lose the basic expectation of privacy and safety. The NCPT reports that the current density of the prison population is directly linked to an alarming increase in the risk of violence. When cells designed for one hold two or three, the friction is inevitable. Furthermore, the commission highlights a dramatic decline in healthcare provision. In a country that prides itself on world-class medical standards, the fact that prisoners are struggling to access basic care is a staggering indictment of the current state of affairs. Staff members are also caught in the crossfire, facing working conditions that are under severe and unsustainable strain, leading to burnout and security vulnerabilities.
The crisis extends beyond traditional penitentiaries and into the subterranean world of civil defence shelters. The commission’s report shines a harsh light on the accommodation of asylum-seekers in these underground bunkers. These facilities, often built to withstand nuclear blasts, are now housing vulnerable human beings in conditions described as 'problematic.' Residents endure a total lack of natural light, living in a perpetual twilight dominated by the constant, maddening hum of ventilation systems. The noise is incessant, and the overcrowding in these confined spaces exacerbates the psychological toll on those seeking refuge. This reliance on emergency infrastructure for long-term housing is a critical failure of the current asylum strategy, turning what should be a temporary safety net into a claustrophobic trap.
Simply building more cells is a hollow solution that fails to address the root of the problem. The NCPT is calling for a radical shift: a comprehensive national strategy to reduce the total number of people in detention. This bold stance challenges the traditional political reflex to expand capacity whenever the system overflows. Instead, the commission urges lawmakers to confront the drivers of incarceration and explore alternative sentencing. The future of Swiss justice depends on whether the state can pivot from a reactive 'more beds' approach to a proactive 'fewer prisoners' philosophy. As the 2026 report makes clear, the status quo is not just unsustainable—it is a violation of the values Switzerland claims to uphold on the global stage. The clock is ticking for the Federal Assembly to act before the system collapses entirely.