Ukraine seeks Swiss support in returning abducted children
During a high-level diplomatic visit, Ukrainian President Zelensky requests Swiss assistance in efforts to return children forcibly taken to Russia
During a high-level diplomatic visit, Ukrainian President Zelensky requests Swiss assistance in efforts to return children forcibly taken to Russia

"Zelensky expressed his gratitude for Switzerland’s financial support and his hope that Bern would join the efforts to free the Ukrainian children abducted to Russia."
"Riniker reaffirmed Switzerland’s willingness to work towards a sustainable and just peace based on the United Nations Charter."
In a decisive diplomatic confrontation in Kiev, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has placed a critical request directly at Switzerland's feet: help us bring our stolen children home. During a high-stakes visit by Swiss National Council President Maja Riniker, the dialogue shifted rapidly from general support to the agonizing reality of abduction. While Zelensky expressed gratitude for Bern's financial backing, he made it unequivocally clear that Switzerland's renowned "good offices" are now desperately needed to address a humanitarian catastrophe.
Riniker, accompanied by Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Laurent Wehrli, arrived in a capital still grappling with war more than three years after the Russian invasion. Her meeting with Zelensky and Ruslan Stefanchuk, President of the Verkhovna Rada, was not merely ceremonial. It was a strategic session where Riniker reaffirmed Switzerland's aggressive pursuit of a "sustainable and just peace" based on the UN Charter. However, the spotlight remains firmly on Zelensky's specific call to action: Bern must join the international crusade to liberate the thousands of minors forcibly transferred to Russian territory.
The figures are nothing short of horrifying. Amnesty International reports a staggering 20,000 known cases of Ukrainian children deported to Russia—identified by name and still missing. Yet, authorities fear this number is merely the tip of the iceberg, with the true count of unreported cases likely soaring far higher. This is not just displacement; it is a systematic erasure of identity that has drawn the ire of the highest international courts.
Since March 2023, Russian President Vladimir Putin has been a wanted man, with the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague issuing an arrest warrant based on the well-founded suspicion of his direct responsibility for these unlawful deportations. The gravity of these charges underscores the urgency of Zelensky's request to Switzerland. This is a war crime playing out in real-time, and the window to return these children before their identities are permanently altered is closing rapidly. The Swiss delegation's visit highlights that diplomatic neutrality does not equate to blindness in the face of such overwhelming evidence of human rights violations.
Switzerland is backing its diplomatic words with massive financial firepower. By the end of May 2025, the Confederation had already deployed a colossal CHF 5.16 billion to support victims of the war, both within Ukraine and on Swiss soil. This is not a passive contribution; it represents a significant mobilization of national resources aimed at protecting civilians, ensuring access to education, and strengthening local infrastructure against the ravages of conflict.
Looking ahead, Bern's commitment remains ironclad. The government has pledged an additional CHF 5 billion in support to be rolled out between 2025 and 2036, signaling a long-term strategy rather than a temporary fix. Riniker’s visit was partly to inspect the efficacy of these Swiss-funded projects on the ground. In a landscape devastated by artillery and economic collapse, Swiss francs are currently a lifeline for millions, proving that while Switzerland stays militarily neutral, its financial intervention is aggressively humanitarian.
The human cost of this war defies comprehension, with displacement figures reaching biblical proportions. Since the invasion began in February 2022, a relentless exodus has occurred. As of July 2025, nearly four million Ukrainians remain displaced within their own shattered borders, while a staggering six million have been forced to flee the country entirely. This demographic shockwave continues to reverberate across Europe, challenging social structures and economies alike.
Switzerland finds itself at the heart of this humanitarian storm. The alpine nation is currently home to nearly 70,000 Ukrainian refugees, a testament to the ongoing severity of the conflict. Riniker’s discussions in Kiev regarding "humanitarian needs" are directly linked to these numbers. As the war drags on, the integration and support of these 70,000 individuals remain a pressing domestic issue for Bern, inextricably checking Swiss domestic policy against the violent reality on the Ukrainian front lines.