The executive council of canton Bern has expressed its willingness to explicitly list feminicide in its crime statistics, marking a potential first in Switzerland. However, the cantonal government stated it prefers to wait for a uniform national definition before implementing the change.

"In Switzerland, the term āfeminicideā is still not firmly anchored in political discourse."
"Violence inflicted on women is often regarded as a private matter."
Canton Bern is poised to shatter a long-standing statistical silence. In a bold move that challenges the status quo, the executive council has declared its readiness to call feminicide by its proper name, signaling a massive shift in how the canton approaches gender-based violence. For too long, these crimes have been buried under vague terminology. Now, the government is signaling it is prepared to explicitly carve out a category for 'feminicide' in its annual crime statistics.
This decision marks a critical turning point. Currently, zero official institutions in Switzerland systematically document this specific type of crime, leaving a gaping hole in our understanding of violence against women. Bern is stepping up to fill that void. However, the celebration is premature. While the willingness is there, the execution is on hold. The canton has made it clear: they will not go it alone. The executive council is demanding a unified front, refusing to implement the change until a standardized national definition is locked in. This hesitation creates a tension between the urgent need for recognition and the bureaucratic necessity of uniformity.
The driving force behind this seismic shift is a motion led by Green Party parliamentarian Manuel C. Widmer, which rips the veil off what has long been dismissed as a 'private matter.' The authors of the motion argue that violence against women is not merely a collection of isolated tragedies but a systemic issue rooted in patriarchal power structures. They contend that without specific terminology, the political discourse remains blind to the reality of the problem.
"In Switzerland, the term āfeminicideā is still not firmly anchored in political discourse," the motion states, highlighting a critical gap in the nation's vocabulary. By refusing to name the crime, society minimizes it. The motion demands that the government stop treating these acts as domestic disputes and start recording them as what they are: targeted violence based on gender. This is not just about numbers; it is about validation. It is a confrontation with a culture that has historically looked away when violence occurs behind closed doors.
While Bern is ready to act, the brakes are being pumped by the need for federal cohesion. The government's response is clear: isolated statistics are useless statistics. To truly grasp the scale of feminicide, Bern insists on a comparison at the national level. The executive council warns that it would be "inappropriate" to limit these figures to a single canton, risking a distorted view of reality.
All eyes are now turning to the Federal Council. Bern is effectively passing the ball to the national stage, referring to the pending postulate regarding a "Feasibility study for keeping statistics on feminicides." The message is stark: Bern is willing, but Switzerland must move as one. This creates a high-stakes waiting game. Until a single, uniform definition and set of criteria are established federally, Bern's progressive stance remains a promise rather than a practice. The pressure is now squarely on federal lawmakers to deliver the standards that the cantons are waiting for.
This development signals an unprecedented awakening in Swiss governance. If the Federal Council acts swiftly to define the criteria, we could see a domino effect across all 26 cantons. The inclusion of feminicide in crime statistics would do more than just fill a spreadsheet; it would force a reckoning with the lethality of gender inequality in one of the world's most developed nations.
By distinguishing feminicide from general homicide, authorities can finally begin to track patterns, identify risk factors, and allocate resources where they are desperately needed. The era of regarding violence against women as a 'family tragedy' is ending. Bern has lit the fuse. Now, the rest of Switzerland must decide whether to let it burn out or use the light to expose a reality that has been hidden in the dark for far too long.