The clock has officially stopped ticking for killers in Switzerland. In a landmark decision that fundamentally alters the nation's penal landscape, the House of Representatives has voted to abolish the 30-year statute of limitations for murder. This move declares loud and clear: time will no longer wash away the guilt of the most heinous crime.
For decades, Swiss law allowed murderers to walk free if they could evade justice for three decades. That era is ending. By approving this motion, parliament ensures that murder becomes an imprescriptible crime, aligning the Criminal Code and the Military Criminal Code with a stricter, uncompromising vision of justice. The message to perpetrators is chilling and absolute: there is no finish line, no safe harbor, and no date on the calendar that guarantees immunity. This decision marks a pivotal shift in Swiss criminal justice, prioritizing the eternal accountability of the offender over legal closure.