
Missile alerts, shelter-in-place orders and closed airports have left more than 4,000 Swiss citizens across the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Oman in limbo, according to interviews published by SWI swissinfo.ch on 4 March. Consular director Marianne Jenni told the outlet that the foreign ministry’s helpline has already fielded over a thousand direct enquiries, but organised evacuations remain impossible until airspace re-opens. Swiss nationals recount sleepless nights in hotel basements and frantic calls from relatives at home. One Dubai-based expatriate described hearing explosions while monitoring embassy e-mails that recommended staying indoors. In Doha, a Swiss engineer working on an energy project received automated missile-defence alerts on his phone and was ordered to work remotely. The situation tests the limits of Switzerland’s crisis-management posture, which relies primarily on commercial carriers rather than state aircraft.
Officials urge all Swiss abroad to register on the Travel Admin app, keep passports handy and follow local instructions.
For Swiss travelers grappling with documentation issues—whether it’s a soon-to-expire passport or an urgent need for onward visas once airspace reopens—VisaHQ can take much of the administrative burden off their shoulders. Through its dedicated Switzerland portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/), the service offers step-by-step application guidance, expedited processing and real-time tracking, giving both stranded nationals and their employers extra peace of mind during an already tense situation.
Employers with assignees in the region should ensure personnel lists, emergency contacts and medical-evacuation coverage are up to date. For global-mobility teams the case illustrates why psychological assistance is as crucial as logistics: stranded staff may need counselling, cash advances or extended accommodation support. It also spotlights the importance of dual-location payroll planning, as delays could push travellers over local tax-residency thresholds if the crisis drags on. The foreign ministry has not ruled out further measures—including liaising with SWISS and Edelweiss on additional relief flights—once security conditions permit.
Officials urge all Swiss abroad to register on the Travel Admin app, keep passports handy and follow local instructions.
For Swiss travelers grappling with documentation issues—whether it’s a soon-to-expire passport or an urgent need for onward visas once airspace reopens—VisaHQ can take much of the administrative burden off their shoulders. Through its dedicated Switzerland portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/), the service offers step-by-step application guidance, expedited processing and real-time tracking, giving both stranded nationals and their employers extra peace of mind during an already tense situation.
Employers with assignees in the region should ensure personnel lists, emergency contacts and medical-evacuation coverage are up to date. For global-mobility teams the case illustrates why psychological assistance is as crucial as logistics: stranded staff may need counselling, cash advances or extended accommodation support. It also spotlights the importance of dual-location payroll planning, as delays could push travellers over local tax-residency thresholds if the crisis drags on. The foreign ministry has not ruled out further measures—including liaising with SWISS and Edelweiss on additional relief flights—once security conditions permit.