South African-Swiss relations refers to the current and historical relations between South Africa and Switzerland. South Africa has an embassy in Bern and a general consulate in Geneva. Switzerland has an embassy in Pretoria and a general consulate in Cape Town.
South Africa |
Switzerland |
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Trade
editSwitzerland did not participate in the United Nations-led boycott of apartheid South Africa, though it did observe the arms-embargo. As a result, in 2002 Swiss banks UBS and Credit Suisse faced a $50 billion lawsuit in the United States. Lawyer Ed Fagan led the suit on behalf of the plaintiffs. South African human rights lawyer Dumisa Ntsebeza also coordinated the suit. The Swiss banks firmly denied the charges.[1] The lawsuit was ultimately dismissed.
A Swiss-government funded study authored by Historian Peter Hug revealed in 2005 that Swiss company Sulzer AG provided parts used in South African nuclear weapon-related uranium enrichment, providing necessary fissile material during the 1970s.[2]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Swiss banks 'face apartheid lawsuit' BBC News, 16 June 2002
- ^ How the Swiss helped apartheid South Africa to build the bomb' The Telegraph, 29 Oct 2005
External links
edit- South African Department of Foreign Affairs about relations with Switzerland
- Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs about relations with South Africa