Swiss Review 6/2021

Swiss Review / December 2021 / No.6 28 Notes from the Federal Palace Victims of compulsory social measures and placements in Switzerland before 1981 are entitled to a “solidarity contribution” – a payment intended as Switzerland’s acknowledgement of the injustice that they suffered. Applications for this payment are open to thosewho suffered orweremistreated as children or young adults after being placed in administrative care, e.g. indentured by the authorities to farms as a cheap source of labour, or placed in children’s homes. The same applies to victims of forced abortions, adoptions, sterilisation procedures, and castration, as well as those who were used as subjects in medical trials against theirwill (see article in edition 4/2018 of “Swiss Review”). Some 10,300 applications have already tutions provide is free of charge and can also be accessed by people domiciled abroad. The Federal Office of Justice’s CSMP Unit can additionally be contacted for further information (+41 58 462 42 84 or sekretariat@fuersorgerischezwangsmassnahmen.ch). FOJ , CSMP UNI T Solidarity payment for victims of compulsory social measures Thanks to a legal amendment, it is still possible to apply for a solidarity contribution. been submitted to the Federal Office of Justice so far, of which around 500 originate from people domiciled abroad. About 96 per cent have been approved and the solidarity contribution paid out. The Federal Act on Compulsory Social Measures and Placements (CSMP) originally stipulated that applications for the solidarity contribution be submitted no later than the end ofMarch 2018. A variety of factors meant that many people were unable to submit their applications before this deadline. Parliament therefore decided to amend the act by lifting the deadline. The revised act came into force on 1 November 2020. Consequently, anyone who has not yet submitted their application cannowdo so at any time. To facilitate the application procedure, the Federal Office of Justice has put together a download page containing the application form (including relevant instructions), which can be printed out or filled out electronically: revue.link/solidarity. Anyonewho needs additional help in submitting their application or locating records is invited to contact the relevant cantonal victimcentre or cantonal archive. A file containing a list of addresses is also available to download on the aforementioned website. The support that these instiContract children and victims of enforced protective measures protest in front of the Federal Palace in Berne with photos bearing witness to their stolen youth (2014). Photo: Keystone Contract children, seen here in Wattenwil (Berne, 1954), were often exploited as cheap labour. Photo: Keystone

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