Uschi Waser has two Instagram profiles. With one she divides her nature observations and takes her followers to the Aare, where a cubes slide into the water, into the mountains into two ibexes or a young bird. On the second Insta-account @Kind_der_landstrasse_1952 She gives an insight into her childhood: into the 50 stations, including 27 homes and foster families in which she had to spend the first 14 years of life. In her files and thus into the crime she was done.
In her living room in Holderbank in the canton of Aargau, the 72-year-old tells what a great relief it is that what she has felt for decades and what she has been fighting for so long, finally “finally” is officially confirmed: Switzerland has committed a crime against humanity in dealing with their Jenian fellow citizens if the current international law standard is taken as a yardstick. The legal opinion comes to this conclusion “The persecution of Swiss Jenish (and Sinti) in the light of international law criminal law “, that the Zurich international law professor Oliver Diggelmann wrote on behalf of the federal government. Jenic organizations had required it.