Canton establishes CHF 20 million framework to address pre-1981 compulsory measures

"With the financial compensation, the canton of Zurich wants to make a contribution to making amends for the injustice committed."
A staggering CHF 20 million has been earmarked by the Zurich cantonal government to finally address one of the darkest chapters in Swiss social history. In a decisive move to acknowledge state-sanctioned injustice, the canton is establishing a massive framework credit designed to compensate victims of coercive measures enforced prior to 1981. This is not merely a bureaucratic adjustment; it is a profound admission of guilt and a tangible step toward reconciliation for hundreds of lives derailed by authority.
The proposal, which now heads to the cantonal parliament, aims to deliver swift financial solidarity to those who suffered under a system that often prioritized control over human dignity. "With the financial compensation, the canton of Zurich wants to make a contribution to making amends for the injustice committed," the government declared on Thursday. This bold initiative signals that Zurich is no longer willing to leave the scars of the past unaddressed. While money can never fully restore lost years or shattered families, this multi-million franc commitment represents a critical, undeniable validation of the victims' suffering. The government is moving with urgency, anticipating that this fund will serve as a closing of ranks between the state and the citizens it once failed.
Until 1981, a grim reality existed beneath the veneer of Swiss order: the systematic exploitation and incapacitation of the vulnerable. The state wielded unchecked power to lock up children in homes, force young people into labor on farms, and place individuals in foster care where they were often utilized as cheap, voiceless workers. This was not an anomaly; it was policy. Adults deemed "dissolute" or "work-shy" faced even more harrowing fates, including forced incapacitation and, in the most egregious violations of bodily autonomy, sterilization.
Men and women were routinely sent to labor institutions for "re-education" or confined to psychiatric clinics against their will, often without any criminal conviction. These administrative measures stripped citizens of their basic freedoms under the guise of social welfare. The victims were not criminals; they were often poor, marginalized, or simply non-conforming. The psychological and physical toll of these actions created a generational trauma that the canton is only now fully attempting to monetize and acknowledge. This new compensation scheme forces a public reckoning with the fact that for decades, forced labor and detention were tools of the state used against its own people.
The government's plan is precise and targeted: a one-off solidarity payment of CHF 25,000 awaits each eligible victim. Authorities estimate that approximately 800 people will come forward to claim this restitution, a figure that underscores the scale of the abuse while acknowledging the passage of time has left fewer survivors. The State Archives have been tasked with the rigorous responsibility of examining applications, ensuring that the historical record validates the claims of those seeking justice.
However, the scheme comes with strict exclusions. To ensure the funds reach those who have yet to be recognized, people who have already received solidarity contributions from other cantons, the city of Zurich, or other municipalities will not be eligible for this specific payout. This stipulation aims to prevent double compensation while focusing resources on those who have been overlooked by previous reparation efforts. The logistical machinery is being primed to handle these sensitive cases, transforming the abstract concept of "apology" into a direct deposit that acknowledges the specific harm done to each individual by cantonal authorities.
January 1, 1981, marks the definitive line in the sand for Swiss civil rights. On this date, new federal provisions regarding the deprivation of liberty came into force, effectively dismantling the legal framework that allowed these abuses to fester. For the first time in the nation's history, a standardized legal basis was established that empowered individuals to challenge interventions in their personal freedom in a court of law. This was a seismic shift that rendered the old cantonal provisions obsolete.
Prior to this watershed moment, the "administrative care" system operated in a legal vacuum where the state's word was final and unassailable. The introduction of these federal protections forced cantons like Zurich to repeal or radically adapt their laws, ending the era of arbitrary detention and forced labor. Today's CHF 20 million proposal serves as the financial bookend to that era, closing the loop on a period where the law failed to protect the most vulnerable. It is a stark reminder that legal progress often comes too late for the victims of the past, necessitating exactly this kind of retrospective justice.