In a significant ruling on naturalization, a court in Aargau has determined that minor offenses committed as a teenager, such as egg-throwing, do not justify the denial of a Swiss passport, upholding an Eritrean woman's appeal.

"Teenage pranks like eggâthrowing are no reason to deny a Swiss passport."
"It would be arbitrary to reject the application solely on the basis of this conviction."
In a decisive blow against bureaucratic overreach, the Administrative Court of the Canton of Aargau has quashed a controversial decision to deny Swiss citizenship to a young woman based on trivial teenage misconduct. The ruling marks a significant victory for common sense in Switzerland's often rigid naturalization process. The court explicitly determined that the refusal to grant a passport to the Eritrean applicant was not only unjustified but legally "arbitrary."
The Aargau naturalization commission had previously blocked the woman's path to citizenship, citing a conviction during the procedure as the sole disqualifier. However, the court found this stance incompatible with both Swiss law and the Constitution. By overturning the lower body's decision, the judiciary has sent a powerful message: naturalization authorities cannot wield their power blindly. They must evaluate the severity of offenses and the individual's character rather than issuing blanket rejections for minor infractions.
The offenses that nearly cost this young woman her future as a Swiss citizen were shockingly minor. At the age of 15, she participated in a "Lausbubenstreich"âa classic teenage prank. Along with a group of peers, she threw eggs at a house facade and rang doorbells in a residential building. These are acts of mischief, not malice.
The juvenile court recognized this distinction immediately, issuing nothing more than a warning. Yet, the naturalization commission treated these indiscretions as fatal flaws in her application. The disparity between the juvenile court's leniency and the commission's severity highlights a critical flaw in the system. While the judicial system saw a teenager making a mistake, the administrative body saw a criminal. This ruling exposes the danger of allowing minor juvenile records to derail the integration of otherwise law-abiding residents.
The court's dismantling of the commission's argument was thorough and scathing. It ruled that a conviction does not automatically trigger a disqualification from naturalization. Instead, authorities are legally bound to examine the specific act, the circumstances, and the culpability of the applicant. In this case, the commission failed to do so.
The judges emphasized that the incident was a "unique" event committed in the context of collective peer pressure. Furthermore, the court noted that there is no reason to fear the applicant will reoffend. By rejecting the application solely on the basis of a warning for a prank, the commission acted arbitrarilyâa direct violation of constitutional principles. This verdict reinforces the requirement for proportionality in administrative law, ensuring that the punishment fits the crime, even in the high-stakes arena of Swiss citizenship.
This ruling clears the path for the young woman's full integration into Swiss society. The court noted that the incident occurred more than a year before the commission's decision, making the denial even more unreasonable. To claim that a year-old prank negates successful integration is, in the eyes of the court, unacceptable.
The cantonal court has now granted the appellant both cantonal and communal citizenship, pending federal approval. While the ruling is not yet final, it sets a crucial precedent for future cases in Aargau and beyond. It serves as a reminder that while Switzerland values law and order, it must not sacrifice fairness on the altar of bureaucracy. For this young woman, and potentially many others, the path to becoming Swiss just became a little less treacherous.