Switzerland's National Commission for the Prevention of Torture has criticized the forced deportation of people with mental health conditions, citing inadequate medical assessments and care, and demanding better protection for these individuals.

"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 confronts a staggering indictment today. The National Commission for the Prevention of Torture (NCPT) has issued a scathing 2025 annual report, slamming the federal government for the forced deportation of mentally ill individuals. This is not a mere bureaucratic oversight; it is a fundamental breakdown of the Swiss humanitarian tradition. The commission demands an immediate cessation of repatriations for those currently undergoing inpatient psychiatric care. While the Swiss Senate simultaneously pushes to expand deportation zones outside of Europe, the NCPT warns that the state is failing its most vulnerable residents. The tension between border enforcement and medical ethics has reached a boiling point, forcing a national reckoning over how we treat those who cannot advocate for themselves. Every deportation carried out under these conditions risks violating international anti-torture conventions, placing Switzerland in a precarious legal and moral position.
Medical assessments in the Swiss deportation machine are alarmingly superficial. The NCPT highlights a critical flaw: 'fitness for transport' is frequently determined solely by reviewing outdated or incomplete case files. In-person psychiatric evaluations are the exception, not the rule. This reliance on paperwork over patients means that individuals who are incapable of controlling their own behavior due to mental illness are being loaded onto planes against their will. The commission asserts that these individuals are often unable to comprehend their situation, yet they are subjected to the high-stress environment of a forced removal. This 'armchair diagnosis' approach is not just inadequate; it is dangerous. The report notes that when information is missing or years out of date, the risk of a medical emergency mid-flight soars. Switzerland must pivot toward a model that prioritizes live clinical assessments before a single deportation order is signed, ensuring that no one is sent into a vacuum of care based on a dusty file.
The medical safety net for deportees plummets the moment they enter detention. The NCPT identifies a 'broken chain' of supervision that begins at the point of arrest and continues until arrival in the destination country. Currently, there is no guarantee that necessary medication will be provided during transit, nor is there a requirement for suitable follow-up arrangements upon arrival. For a person suffering from severe psychiatric disorders, this gap in care is a death sentence for their stability. The commission emphasizes that medical supervision must be constant and specialized. Meanwhile, the destination countries often lack the infrastructure to handle complex mental health needs, effectively abandoning these individuals to the streets or worse. By failing to secure follow-up care, Switzerland is effectively exporting a human rights crisis. The commission’s findings suggest that without a guaranteed medical hand-off, these forced removals constitute a violation of the duty of care that the Swiss state owes to every person under its jurisdiction.
Switzerland stands at a crossroads where political expediency meets human dignity. The NCPT’s 2025 report serves as a definitive warning: the current trajectory is unsustainable. As the Swiss Senate seeks to allow deportations to third countries outside of Europe, the pressure on the medical assessment system will only intensify. We are witnessing a collision between a hardening immigration policy and the fundamental right to health. The implications are clear: if Switzerland does not overhaul its medical protocols for deportations, it risks losing its status as a global leader in human rights. Moving forward, the government must integrate the NCPT’s recommendations into federal law, ensuring that mental health is never treated as a secondary concern in the pursuit of border control. The world is watching to see if the Alpine nation will uphold its values or sacrifice them for the sake of administrative efficiency. The time for reform is not next year—it is now.