The National Commission for the Prevention of Torture has slammed Swiss practices for the forced deportation of people with mental health conditions. In its annual report, the watchdog demands better protection, citing inadequate medical assessments and care, and recommends halting repatriations for those currently in psychiatric treatment.

"People with mental health conditions must be better protected and receive appropriate medical care when being forcibly deported from Switzerland."
Switzerland’s reputation as a bastion of human rights is facing a blistering critique from its own internal watchdog. The National Commission for the Prevention of Torture (NCPT) has issued a scathing 2025 annual report that exposes a harrowing reality: the Swiss state is forcibly deporting mentally ill individuals without adequate safeguards. This isn't just a minor administrative lapse; it is a fundamental breakdown of the duty of care. The NCPT demands an immediate overhaul of how the most vulnerable are treated during the repatriation process. While the Swiss Senate pushes to expand deportation powers to territories outside Europe, the NCPT is sounding the alarm on the ethical vacuum currently existing within the domestic system. The report highlights that the current machinery of the state is moving too fast and looking too little at the human cost. For a nation that prides itself on the Geneva Conventions, these findings represent a significant and alarming departure from humanitarian standards. The urgency is palpable as the commission insists that protection must be prioritized over bureaucratic efficiency.
Bureaucracy is trumping biology in the Swiss deportation machine. A staggering number of 'fitness for transport' assessments are being conducted solely on the basis of case files, some of which are dangerously out of date or critically incomplete. The NCPT slams this 'paper-only' approach, noting that officials are making life-altering decisions without ever seeing the patient in a clinical setting. How can a state determine if a person is fit for a high-stress, forced flight when the medical data is years old? The commission’s findings suggest a system that favors checkboxes over stethoscopes. This reliance on archival data ignores the volatile nature of mental health, where a patient's condition can plummet in a matter of hours. The NCPT is now calling for a mandatory halt on the repatriation of any individual currently undergoing inpatient psychiatric treatment. They argue that if a person is deemed too ill to be in the community and requires hospitalization, they are inherently unfit for the trauma of forced removal. This creates a direct confrontation between migration authorities and medical ethics, forcing a long-overdue conversation on the validity of Swiss administrative procedures.
The medical supervision of deportees is not just inadequate—it is virtually non-existent in the most critical phases. The NCPT notes with alarm that medical care for people with mental health conditions is failing at every stage of the deportation pipeline. From the moment of detention to the provision of life-sustaining medication, the gaps are wide and dangerous. Even more concerning is the lack of suitable follow-up arrangements in destination countries. Switzerland is effectively offloading vulnerable individuals into environments where their medical needs cannot be met, potentially violating international non-refoulement principles. The commission highlights that those who lack the volition to control their own behavior due to illness are being treated as standard cases, rather than medical emergencies. This lack of specialized supervision from the point of detention creates a high-risk environment for both the deportees and the officers involved. The watchdog insists that medication continuity and professional medical accompaniment are not optional luxuries but fundamental requirements. Without these, the process of deportation risks crossing the line into 'cruel and unusual' treatment, a label no Swiss institution wants to carry.
Switzerland stands at a critical crossroads between its migration policy and its humanitarian identity. The NCPT’s report is more than a list of recommendations; it is a demand for a moral recalibration. As the Swiss Senate seeks to allow deportations to third countries outside Europe, the pressure to maintain rigorous standards at home has never been higher. The implications are clear: if Switzerland cannot guarantee the safety of mentally ill individuals within its current framework, expanding deportation powers could lead to an unprecedented human rights crisis. The commission’s call to refrain from forced repatriation for those unable to control their behavior is a direct challenge to the current 'efficiency-first' model of the Federal Assembly. Moving forward, the Swiss government must decide if it will heed these warnings or continue a trajectory that the watchdog suggests borders on the inhumane. The eyes of the international community—and the strict gaze of the NCPT—remain fixed on Bern. The coming months will reveal whether the Swiss state chooses to uphold its legacy of protection or continues to prioritize the mechanics of removal over the sanctity of mental health.