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Home Switzerland

Swiss minister highlights plight of ‘slave children’

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
June 13, 2026
in Switzerland
Reading Time: 11 mins read
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Swiss minister highlights plight of ‘slave children’
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Federal Councillor recalls the plights of indentured children

Interior Minister Elisabeth Baume-Schneider described the deep scars left on society by compulsory social measures and foster placements.


Keystone-SDA

Around 800 people who, as children, were forcibly placed in institutions in Switzerland, gathered in Langenthal, near Bern, on Saturday. Addressing the gathering, Interior Minister Elisabeth Baume-Schneider described the deep scars left on society by compulsory social measures and foster placements.





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This content was published on


June 13, 2026 – 14:06

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Baume-Schneider said that those affected “deserve historical clarity and an honest examination of what happened”. What had befallen them was an injustice, she added.

Switzerland has started to come to terms with this issue, which requires patience and courage, said the Swiss minister. “We must ask all the questions, including – and especially – the uncomfortable ones,” said Baume-Schneider. There are still too many grey areas, particularly regarding the persecution of the Yenish and Sinti children. This process of coming to terms with the past must be taught in museums, universities, history books and schools, she said.

According to the Guido Fluri Foundation, which hosted the national meeting and initiated a reparations initiative, Saturday’s guests are among the last surviving eyewitnesses of a dark chapter in Swiss social history.

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Education

Recognising Switzerland’s “slave children”




This content was published on


Apr 9, 2013



It is a chapter in Swiss history that has left painful scars. Now victims of these measures have been invited to a “ceremony of commemoration” in Bern on Thursday. “I was born without a father and my mother gave me to my grandmother to look after. When my grandmother died, they placed me with the…



Read more: Recognising Switzerland’s “slave children”


“They experienced severe mistreatment and abuse in homes and on farms, in foster care or in a church context. Their biographies and memories are now part of Swiss history,” the foundation said in a statement.

The Guido Fluri Foundation gained prominence in 2014 with the launch of the Reparations Initiative. Its aim was to secure financial reparations for “slave children” and victims of compulsory welfare measures, as well as to facilitate a reappraisal of the past. In 2015, parliament adopted a counter-proposal that incorporated the key points of the initiative.

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Harsh judgment for a harsh care system




This content was published on


Feb 11, 2015



Switzerland is trying to atone for historic wrongs committed against children in care. The children were the victims but who were the culprits?



Read more: Harsh judgment for a harsh care system


Psychological violence and abuse

Until 1981, tens of thousands of children and adults in Switzerland were affected by compulsory care measures or out-of-home placements. “Slave children” were exploited as cheap labour on farms, suffered severe physical and psychological violence, and were often sexually abused.

Victims included “slave” and institutionalised children, children from traveller communities, Yenish communities and forcibly adopted children, as well as individuals who were committed to secure institutions – so-called “administratively cared for” persons.

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History

Who were Switzerland’s ‘slave children’?




This content was published on


Jan 31, 2015



Clare O’Dea speaks to victims of historic abuse and neglect in Switzerland’s inadequate care system of the 1920s to 1970s and takes a closer look at the social and economic pressures at play.  After years of campaigning by survivors, Swiss society now recognises that children in the past care system were badly let down. The Swiss government has…



Read more: Who were Switzerland’s ‘slave children’?


Adapted from French by AI/sb


We select the most relevant news for an international audience and use automatic translation tools to translate them into English. A journalist then reviews the translation for clarity and accuracy before publication.  

Providing you with automatically translated news gives us the time to write more in-depth articles. The news stories we select have been written and carefully fact-checked by an external editorial team from news agencies such as Bloomberg or Keystone.

If you have any questions about how we work, write to us at english@swissinfo.ch

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