Switzerland’s top-ranked Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich has been cleared of accusations concerning governance, funding and gender bias by two external investigations.
This content was published on
2 minutes
Keystone-SDA/ETH Board/swissinfo.ch/ilj
In March, the ETH Board, which oversees both the ETH ZurichExternal link and its sister institution in Lausanne, the EPFL, commissioned an external report after allegations of corruption made in the media by a female professor. The ETH Zurich had denied the corruption allegations.
In a statementExternal link on Thursday evening, the ETH Board said the external report, by the Swiss auditing, accounting and consulting company BDO, found that in the ETH Zurich’s Department of Physics, “the rules governing the allocation of funds are complied with and that the funds are allocated in a lawful, appropriate and sufficiently transparent manner, that there is no discrimination regarding the appointment of leading functionaries and that there are no indications of corruption and of abuse of office and power at ETH Zurich”.
The reportExternal link made some recommendations for improvements in the processes for fund allocation and top appointments.
An additional investigationExternal link was carried out by the Swiss Federal Audit Office (SFAO)External link at two ETH Zurich departments and two EPFL faculties. It concluded that there was “no systematic discrimination on the basis of gender but suggests reinforced measures to promote transparency”, the statement said. The ETH Board said it supported this recommendation.
ETH Zurich President Joël Mesot told Keystone-SDA that he welcomed the findings of both reports. The allegations made in March had thus been rebutted, he said. He said that both reports contained valuable suggestions for additional improvements, which “we gladly accept. Some of them are already being put into action”.
The ETH Zurich is Switzerland’s top-ranked university and one of the best in the world, as recently seen in the QS university rankings which placed it sixth, moving ahead of Britain’s Cambridge.
More
More
ETH Zurich moves into the top six universities worldwide
This content was published on
The Zurich-based Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich) has moved up one place in the latest QS university rankings.
Swiss mountain municipality partly evacuated due to landslide threat
This content was published on
Part of the municipality of Blatten in canton Valais had to be evacuated on Saturday evening for safety reasons after a landslide.
This content was published on
Two people died after an avalanche on the Eiger in canton Bern on Saturday, police said. Five others were airlifted to hospital.
This content was published on
The Austrian countertenor won the 69th Eurovision in Basel on Saturday, edging out Israel. Switzerland’s Zoë Më came tenth.
Swiss minister: situation at German border hasn’t changed
This content was published on
Tighter rules at Germany’s borders have so far not had an impact on Switzerland, Justice Minister Beat Jans said on Saturday.
Basel ‘satisfied’ with Eurovision week as grand final approaches
This content was published on
Ahead of the Eurovision final on Saturday, authorities in Basel say the event has so far gone well, without major incidents.
Swiss Abroad elect representatives online for first time
This content was published on
Swiss citizens in 50 countries have used electronic voting for the first time to elect representatives to the Council of the Swiss Abroad for the 2025-2029 legislative.
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.
Read more
More
ETH Zurich acts over bullying
This content was published on
Switzerland’s leading university has moved to dismiss a professor accused of bullying and pledged wide-ranging measures to tackle the issue.
This content was published on
Choosing the right university is an important decision. Find the right fit with swissinfo.ch’s university rankings and fees visualisations.
Swiss university system climbs to third in global study
This content was published on
Thanks largely to the strong performance of ETH Zurich, the Swiss university system has entered the top three globally in the latest QS rankings.
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
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.