A 23-year-old woman suspected of planning terrorist activities has been deported to her native Colombia.
The Swiss Federal Office of Police (Fedpol) confirmed on Wednesday that the deportation had taken place on Monday. There are ongoing criminal proceedings against the woman, as Fedpol told Swiss public television, SRF.
The woman’s husband is thought to be the head of a suspected terrorist cell and is currently being held in France. The couple was arrested in November as part of a Franco-Swiss raid involving ten suspects. They are accused of planning various attacks on Swiss cities.
Specifically, they made plans to derail passenger trains and attack nightclubs and churches. The woman later dismissed these conversations – recorded by police – as “thought experiments”.
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Foreign Affairs
Terror suspects discussed attacks on Swiss nightclubs and trains
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A couple arrested last November considered concrete targets for possible terror attacks in Switzerland, it has emerged.
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Famine has been declared in a northern part of the Gaza Strip, according to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) system.
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Ground handling staff at Zurich Airport have announced a strike for Friday afternoon. According to a union, 200 jobs are at risk.
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Philippe Lazzarini will step down as head of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA) at the end of his term in March, he announced on Thursday.
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The Federal Council published its 2026 budget proposal on Thursday: a projected deficit of CHF845 million francs ($1 billion).
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The Gösgen nuclear power plant in northwestern Switzerland will be out of service for six months. It has not been connected to the grid since late May.
Swiss authorities and firms agree to cut sugar in cereals, yoghurts and drinks
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Cereals, yoghurts and drinks in Switzerland will contain less sugar by 2028. The Swiss government and 21 companies renewed the so-called Milan Declaration in Bern on Thursday.
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Swiss woman to face trial for ‘promoting jihad’
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The woman converted to Islam in 2009 and was radicalised over the internet when she was living in the Swiss city of Winterthur in the north east of the country. She then took her then four-year-old son to Egypt and Syria, via Turkey, where she allegedly enrolled with IS. She was later arrested in Turkey and…
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The preacher was on trial for calling for the burning of Muslims who are not devout enough in their worship. Police arrested the cleric in October of last year, after receiving reports of the controversial sermon delivered at the An’Nur mosque in Winterthur, in north-eastern Switzerland. The man is also charged with distributing pictures of executions…
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Public prosecutors have called for an 18-month suspended prison sentence for an imam in Switzerland suspected of inciting violence.
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If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.