ATTENTION CITIZENS: List of people you can and can't insult

Day 260, 06:46 Published in Turkey Turkey by The Daily Ataturk

eRepublik, eInternet - In a perversion of free speech laws everywhere (except in Turkey), the esteemed admin staff of eRepublik has decided that discussing the actual crimes and depravities of a certain unimportant dead person is illegal. In order for our dear readers to be able to practice their rights without fear of execution, The Daily Ataturk has compiled a list of peope whose crimes and depravities, such as genocide, pedophilia, necrophilia, necrophagy, coprophagy, corruption etc. may still be discussed.

List of dead people whose pedophilia etc. can't be mentioned anymore

Mustafa Kemal Ataturk

Impartial list of people you can still discuss

Akbar the Great, ruler of the Mughal Empire of South Asia
Albert the Great (aka Albertus Magnus), medieval German philosopher and theologian
Alexander the Great, King of Macedon
Alfonso the Great of León
Alfred the Great of Wessex, English
Anawrahta the Great, Burma
Anthony the Great early Christian saint of Egypt
Antiochus the Great, Seleucid Empire
Ashoka the Great, Indian emperor of the Maurya dynasty
Askia the Great, Mohamed Toure, Ruler of the Songhai Empire
Bayinnaung the Great, Burma
Bhumibol Adulyadej the Great, Thailand
Bolesław the Brave, sometimes called "the Great," Poland
Buddha Yodfa Chulaloke the Great, Thailand
Canute the Great, Danish, King of Denmark, England, and Norway
Casimir the Great, Poland
Catherine the Great, Russia
Charles the Great, more commonly known as "Charlemagne"
Chulalongkorn the Great, Thailand
Constantine the Great, Rome/Byzantium
Cyrus the Great, Persia (Iran)
Darius the Great, Persia (Iran)
Donia the Great - Grote Pier, (1480-1520), Frisia
Ferdinand the Great, Castile and León
Frederick the Great, Prussia
Frederick the Great, Holy Roman Empire
The Great Gama, Rustam-e-Hindustan
Gertrude the Great of Helfta, medieval mystic
Gustavus Adolphus the Great, Sweden
Gwanggaeto the Great of Goguryeo, Korea
Hanno the Great, Carthage
Henry IV the Great, France
Herod the Great, Judea
Hugh the Great, abbot of Cluny, France
Ivan the Great, Russia
Jasmair Sangha the Great, India
John the Great, Portugal
Justinian the Great, Byzantium
Kamehameha the Great, Hawai'i
Kangxi The Great Emperor, Qing Empire(China)
Karim Khan The Great, Persia (Iran)
Lachit Borphukan, Assam, (India)
Llywelyn the Great, Wales/Gwynedd
Louis the Great, Hungary and Poland
Louis the Great, France
Mithridates the Great, Parthia (Iran)
Mithridates the Great, Pontus
Moctezuma the Great, Aztec empire
Mubarak Al-Sabah the Great, Kuwait
Mutsuhito the Great, Japan
Nader Shah the Great, Persia (Iran)
Napoleon the Great, France
Otto I the Great, Holy Roman Emperor
Pacal the Great, Maya
Parâkramabâhu the Great, Sri Lanka
Peter the Great, Russia
Peter III the Great, Aragon
Pompey the Great, Rome
Prokop the Great, Hussite leader in Bohemia
Ramkhamhaeng the Great, Thailand
Mowlana the Great, Afghanistan, Iran,Tajikistan,Turkey
Rajaraja The Great, Indian emperor of the Cholas[3][4][5].
Ramesses the Great, Ancient Egypt
Rhodri the Great, Wales/Gwynedd
Sancho III the Great, Navarre
Sargon the Great, Akkad
Sasanka the Great, Bengaluru
Sejong the Great, Korea
Shapur the Great, Sassanid empire, Persia (Iran)
Simeon I the Great, Bulgaria
Stephen the Great, Moldova, Romania
St. Basil the Great, theologian, Cappadocia
St. Gregory the Great, pope
St. Leo the Great, pope
Sultan Agung of Mataram,Mataram (Java)
St. Macarius the Great, Egyptian hermit
St. Nicholas the Great, pope
Taksin the Great, Thailand
Tamburlaine the Great, Timurid Empire
Theodoric the Great, Ostrogoths
Theodosius the Great, Rome
Tigranes the Great, Armenia
Tiridates the Great, Armenia
Umar the Great, Arab Muslim Empire
Valdemar I the Great, Denmark
Vladimir Svyatoslavich the Great, Russia
Vytautas the Great, archduke of Lithuanian Grand Duchy
William V the Great, Aquitaine
William the Great, Maleval
Xerxes the Great, Persia (Iran)
Yu the Great, China
Heinrich Otto Abetz (1903-195😎, German ambassador to France, sentenced to 20 years
Jean Akayesu (b. 1953), Rwandan Mouvement Démocratique Républicain politician and mayor (bourgmestre) of Taba commune, sentenced to life imprisonment
Muto Akira (1883-194😎, Japanese army commander and member of the General High Staff, sentenced to death
Zlatko Aleksovski (b. 1960), Bosnian Croat commander of a prison facility, sentenced to 7 years[1]
Josef Altsotter, German Justice Ministry official
Otto Ambros, German government official
Ion Antonescu (1882-1946), Romanian marshal; found guilty by the Romanian People's Tribunals; executed;
Mihai Antonescu (1907-1946), Romanian government official; found guilty by the Romanian People's Tribunals; executed;
Jackie Arklöv (b. 1973) Swedish mercenary who fought on the Croatian side in the Bosnian war, sentenced to 8 years
Andrija Artuković (1899 - 198😎, Croatian minister of Justice and Internal Affairs, Ustasha, sentenced to death, but died before execution
Milan Babić (1956-2006), Croatian Serb and prime minister of Republic of Serb Krajina. Sentenced to 13 years following agreement[2]
Erich von dem Bach (1899-1972), German official and SS officer
Hans Baier, German WVHA official
Lazlo Baky, (d. 1946), Hungarian Interior Ministry official
Haradin Bala (b. 1957), Kosovo-Albanian guard at the Lapušnik prison camp, sentenced to 13 years
Predrag Banović, Bosnian Serb, sentenced to 8 years for Keraterm camp
Klaus Barbie (1913-1991), German Gestapo officer
Laszlo Bardossy (1890-1946), Hungarian Prime Minister
Franz Anton Basch (1901-1946), German Nazi leader in Hungary
Adolf Heinz Beckerle, German ambassador to Bulgaria and Police President of Frankfurt
Friedrich Berger, German Gestapo intelligence officer
Gottlob Berger (1897-1975), German SS official
Robert H. Best, American collaborator and propaganda broadcaster.
Werner Best (1903-1989), German Plenipotentiary of Denmark
Jacobus Petrus Besteman, Dutch Waffen-SS member.
Ernst Biberstein, German Einsatzgruppe C official
Hans Biebow (1902-1947), chief of German Administration of the Łódź Ghetto
Herbertus Bikker, Dutch war criminal
Tihomir Blaškić (b. 1960), Bosnian Croat sentenced to 45 years, changed to 9 years following appeal[3]
Paul Blobel (1894-1951), German Einsatzgruppe C official
Kurt Blome, German Party Main Office official
Walter Blume, German Einsatzgruppe B official
Hans Bobermin, German WVHA official
Heinrich Boere, Dutch war criminal
Wilhelm Bolger (b. 1907), German Auschwitz intelligence officer
Sander Borgers, Dutch war criminal
Martin Ludwig Bormann (1900-c. 1945), German Party Chancellor
Herbert Bottcher (d. 1950), German SS and Police Leader in Radom, Poland
Philipp Bouhler (1899-1945), German Fuhrer Chancellory official
Viktor Brack (1904-194😎, German Fuhrer Chancellory official
Otto Bradfisch (1903-1994), member of the German SS Obersturmbannführer, Leader of Einsatzkommando 8 of Einsatzgruppe B of the Security Police (Sicherheitspolizei) and the SD, and Commander of the Security Police in Litzmannstadt (Łódź) and Potsdam
Miroslav Bralo (b. 1967), Bosnian Croat member of the "Jokers" anti-terrorist platoon, sentenced to 20 years[4]
Karl Brandt (1904-194😎, German Plenipotentiary for Health official
Rudolf Brandt (1909-194😎, secretary of Heinrich Himmler
Heinrich Alfred Hermann Walter von Brauchitsch (1881-194😎, German Commander-in-Chief of the Army
Werner Braune (d. 1951), German Einsatzgruppe D official
Hermine Braunsteiner-Ryan, German Majdanek Prison guard
Radoslav Brdjanin, Bosnian Serb sentenced to 32 years (30 following appeal)[5]
Fernand de Brinion (d. 1947), French collaborator and member of the Vichy government
Siert Bruins, Dutch war criminal
Alois Brunner German SD deportation expert in France, Salonika & Slovakia, rumoured alive in Syria or S. America
Karl Bruno (b. 1911), Yugoslavian collaborator and Belgrade merchant of Croatian origin who accepted the store of a deported Jewish owner
Yuri Budanov, Russian officer convicted of war crimes against civilian population in Chechnya
Joseph Buhler (d. 194😎, German Generalgouvernement official
Heinrich Bunke, German doctor involved in the euthanasia of handicapped in 1940-1941
Heinrich Butefisch (b. 1907), German I.G. Farben official
William Calley (b. 1943), the only United States soldier officially held responsible for the My Lai Massacre
Corneliu Calotescu, Romanian Governor of Bukovina
Pierto Caruso (d. 1944), Italian police chief of Rome
Josef Catlos, Slovakian war minister
Mario Čerkez (b. 1959), Bosnian Croat sentenced to 6 years[6]
Ranko Česić (b. 1964), Bosnian Serb sentenced to 18 years for Brčko[7]
Paul Chack (1876-1945), French collaborator
Dmitri Christov, Bulgarian interor minister
Carl Clauberg (1898-1957), medical doctor present at Auschwitz concentration camp
Karl Clodius, German economist
Sera de Croon, Dutch war criminal
Granville Cubage, American POW serviceman
Rudolf Wilhelm Dahmen von Buchholz, Dutch war criminal
Kurt Daluege (1897-1946), German ORPO and Protektorat official
Theodor Dannecker (1913-1945), German SS deportation expert in France and Bulgaria
Joseph Darnand (1897-1945), Vichy French chief of police
Denice Delfau (d. 1945), French collaborator
Hazim Delić, Bosnian Muslim sentenced to 18 years for Čelebići prison camp[8]
John Demjanjuk (Ivan Denjanjuk) (1921-), officier in Treblinka concentration camp
Albert Deutscher (d. 1981), member of a Nazi paramilitary group
Joseph Dietrich, (Sepp Dietrich) (b. 1893) personal bodyguard to Adolf Hitler and commander of Nazi security
Otto Dietrich (1898-1957), personal Press Secretary to Adolf Hitler
Doihara Kenji (d. 194😎, Japanese general
Karl Dönitz, German minister of war and successor to Adolf Hitler
Anton Dostler (d. 1945), German General
Damir Došen (b. 1967), Bosnian Serb, sentenced to 5 years for Keraterm camp[9]
Sekula Drljević (1884–1945), Montenegrin Nazi collaborator
Walter Durrfeld, official in Auschwitz concentration camp.
Adolf Eichmann (1906-1962), German SS official
August Eigruber (1907-1947), German Gauleiter of Oberdonau (Upper Danube) and Landeshauptmann of Upper Austria
Franz Eirenschmalz (1879-1962), German WVHA official
Lazlo Endre (d. 1946), Hungarian Minister of the Interior
Lynndie England (b. 1982), United States soldier convicted in the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse scandal
Leonard Ennis, American POW serviceman
Franz von Epp (1882-1946), Bavarian politician
Hans Eppinger (1879–1946), Austrian physician who performed medical experiments on prisoners in the Dachau concentration camp
Dražen Erdemović (b. 1972), Bosnian Croat who fought for Serb forces and was sentenced to 5 years for Pileca farm (part of Srebrenica massacre)[10]
Klaas Carel Faber, Dutch war criminal
Pieter Johan Faber, Dutch war criminal
Miroslav Filipović (1915-1946), Croatian Ustashi and administrator of the Jasenovac concentration camp
Stanislav Galić, Bosnian Serb commander in Siege of Sarajevo. Sentenced to 20 years[11], appealed and had his sentence changed to life imprisonment[12]
Jean-Baptiste Gatete (b. 1953), Rwandan politician responsible for the Rwandan Genocide
Karl Gephardt (d. 194😎, German SS chief clinician
Karl Genzken (1895-1957), German SS medical officer
Richard Glucks (1889-1945), German WVHA official
Josef Goebbels [Gobbels] (1897-1945), German Minister of Propaganda
Hermann Goring (1893-1946), Commander of the German Luftwaffe
Amon Göth (1908-1946), Commandant at Nazi concentration camp at Płaszów, Poland
Peter Grabowsky, Bulgarian Minister of the Interior
Charles Graner (b. 196😎, United States soldier convicted in the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse scandal
Stjepan Grandić Croatian, sentenced to 10 years for taking part in the Gospić massacre
Ernst Grawitz (d. 1945), German SS Reich physician
Ulrich Greifelt (d. 1949), German Main Office official
Artur Greiser (d. 1946), German Gauleiter of Wartheland
Irma Grese (1923-1945), German administrator of the Auschwitz concentration camp
Rolf Gunther, German RSHA official
Enver Hadžihasanović (b. 1950), Senior officer in the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina, sentenced to 5 years
Walter Haensch, German Einsatzegruppe C official
Franz Halder (1884-1972), German general and chief of Army General Staff
Siefred Handloser, German Armed Forces Medical Service chief
Fritz Hartjenstein (1905-1954), German Auschwitz concentration camp administrator
Emil Haussmann (d. 194😎, German major
August Heissmeyer (1897-1979), German SS officer
Konrad Henlein (1898–1945), German Gauleiter of Sudetenland
Rudolf Hess (1884–1987), deputy Führer (leader) of Nazi Germany
Reinhard Tristan Eugene Heydrich (1904-1942), German RSHA official and Reichprotektor
Friedrich Hildebrandt (1898-194😎, German RuSHA chief and Higher SS and Police Leader of Danzig
Richard Hildebrandt (1895-1945), German NSDAP Gauleiter of Franconia and SA Gruppenführer
Heinrich Himmler (1900–1945), commander of the German SS and Gestapo
Oskar von Hindenburg (1883-1960), German commander of prisoner of war camps in East Prussia
Hirota Koki (1878-194😎, Japanese premier from 1936-1937
August Hirt (d. 1945), German medical officer who ran the Struthof-Nazweiler laboratory
Adolf Hitler (1889-1945), Führer (leader) of Nazi Germany; convicted at Nuremberg in absentia as he was not then known to be dead
Franz Hofer (1902-1975), German Gauleiter of the Tyrol and Vorarlberg
Heinrich Hoffmann, photographer of Adolf Hitler
Hans Hofle, German SS and Police Leader in Lublin
Hermann Hofle (1911-1962), German Higher SS and Police Leader in Slovakia
Otto Hofmann (1896-1982), German RuSHA official
Hans Hohberg (1898-194😎, German WVHA official
Karl Holz (1895-1945), German NSDAP Gauleiter of Franconia and SA Gruppenführer
Homma Masaharu (1887-1946), Japanese general involved in the Bataan Death March
Dirk Hoogendam, Dutch war criminal
Erich Hoppner (d. 1944), German commander of 4th Panzer Army and Army Group North
Rudolf Francis Ferdinand Hoss (1900-1947), German Auschwitz concentration camp commander and deputy inspector of Nazi concentration camps
Franz Hossler (d. 1945), German Auschwitz concentration camp administrator
Hermann Hoth (1885-1971), German commander of Panzer Group 3, Army Group Center, 17th Group Army and Army Group South
Eduard Houdremont, German Krupp Essen official
Waldemar Hoven (1903-194😎, German Buchenwald concentration camp doctor
Otto Hunsche, German RSHA official
Max Otto Ihn, German Krupp personnel officer
Max Ilgner (1895-1957), German I.G. Farben official
Bela Imredy (1891-1946), Hungarian Prime Minister
Modest Isopescu, Romanian Transnsitrian(?) official
Seishiro Itagaki (1885-194😎, Japanese War Minister
Andor Jarosz (d. 1946), Hungarian interior minister
Freidrich Jeckeln (d. 1946), German SS officer and Police Leader of Ostland
Goran Jelisić (b. 1969), Bosnian Serb sentenced to 40 years for murders in Brčko. Personally killed 13 civilians[13]
Alfred Jodl (1890-1946), German commander of operations personnel
Miodrag Jokić (b. 1935), Serb commander in Siege of Dubrovnik
Drago Josipović (b. 1955), Bosnian Croat sentenced to 15, changed to 12 years following appeal[14][15]
Heinz Jost (d. 1946), German Einsatzgruppe commander
Hans Jüttner (1894-1965) commander of German SS's Main Leadership Office and Obergruppenführer.
Ernst Kaltenbrunner (1903-1946) Chief of Security Police and SD, Gestapo, SS, and all other organizations under. Reinhard Heydrich's replacement. Highest ranking Nazi official to stand trial at Nuremberg. Executed by hanging.
Jean Kambanda (b. 1955), Rwandan prime minister and participant in the Rwandan Genocide
Clément Kayishema (b. 1954), Rwandan politician and participant in the Rwandan Genocide
Abraham Kipp, Dutch war criminal
Dietrich Klagges (b. 1891-d.1971), German politician and premier (Ministerpräsident) of Braunschweig
Fritz Knoechlein (1911-1949), SS Obersturmbannführer, convicted and executed for war crimes (Le Paradis massacre)
Ilse Koch (1906–1967), German female officer at Buchenwald and Sachsenhausen concentration camps
Johnny Paul Koromah (b. 1960), Sierra Leone Army officer and participant in the attempted 1996 coup against President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah government.
Dragan Kolundžija (b. 1959), Bosnian Serb, sentenced to 3 years for Keraterm camp[9]
Dario Kordić (b. 1960), Bosnian Croat, sentenced to 25 years[6]
Milojica Kos, Bosnian Serb, sentenced to 6 years for Omarska camp[16]
Radomir Kovač (b. 1961), Bosnian Serb sentenced to 20 years[17]
Momčilo Krajišnik, Bosnian Serb politician, sentenced to 27 years[18]
Milorad Krnojelac, Bosnian Serb sentenced to 7,5 years for Foča massacres. Following appeal, his sentence was raised to 15 years[19]
Radislav Krstić, Bosnian Serb sentenced to 46 years (35 following appeal) for his part in the Srebrenica massacre, also found guilty of being an accomplice to genocide[20], first such ruling at ICTY
Alfred Krupp {1907-1967} German Steel/Arms maker; Involved in slave labor
Amir Kubura (b. 1964), Senior ABiH officer, sentenced to 2 and a half years
Dragoljub Kunarac (b. 1960), Bosnian Serb sentenced to 28 years [17]
Maarten Kuiper, Dutch war criminal
Franz Kutschera (1904-1944), German SS general and Gauleiter of Carinthia.
Miroslav Kvocka, Bosnian Serb, sentenced to 7 years for Omarska camp[16]
Esad Landžo, Bosnian Muslim sentenced to 15 years for Čelebići prison camp[8]
Hartmann Lauterbacher (1909-198😎 German Gauleiter of the Gau of South Hanover-Braunschweig, SS Gruppenführer Leader and high area leader (Obergebietsführer) of the Hitler Youth.
Hinrich Lohse (1896-1964), German politician
Werner Lorenz (1891-1974), German head of Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle (Repatriation Office for Ethnic Germans) and an SS Obergruppenführer.
Jacob Luitjens', Dutch war criminal
Harry 'Breaker' Harbord Morant (1864– 27 February 1902) convicted and executed for illegal summary executions of Boer and other Prisoners during the Second Boer War.
Milan Martić (b. 1954), President and defence minister of Croatian Serbs during Croatian War of Independence, sentenced to 35 years[21]
Vinko Martinović (b. 1963), Bosnian Croat sentenced to 18 years[22]
Pieter Menten, Dutch war criminal
Salomon Morel (b. 1919), Polish collaborator and commandant of the Soviet Zgoda labor camp
Mile Mrkšić (b. 1947), Serb General convicted to 20 years for the Vukovar massacre[23]
Zdravko Mucić, Bosnian Croat sentenced to 9 years for Čelebići prison camp[8]
Jacob-Willem Munnikhuizen, Dutch war criminal
Alfred Musema (b. 1949), Rwandan businessman who participated in the Rwandan Genocide
Mladen Naletilić (b. 1946), Bosnian Croat sentenced to 20 years[22]
Erich Naumann (d. 1951), German Einsatzgruppe B commander
Samuel Ndashyikirwa, Rwandan businessman and a participant in the Rwandan genocide
Hermann Neubacher (d. 1960), German supported mayor of Vienna and Southeast Economic Plenipotentiary
Konstantin von Neurath (1873-1956), German Foreign Minister and Reichsprotektor
Willem van der Neut, Dutch war criminal
Dragan Nikolić, Bosnian Serb sentenced to 23 years[24]
Pier Nobach, Dutch war criminal
Mirko Norac (b. 1967), Croatian Army general and commander of forces involved during the Gospic massacre
Gustav Noske (1868-1946), German defence minister
Frank Novak, German RSHA official
Étienne Nzabonimana (b. 1950), Rwandan businessman and participant in the Rwandan genocide
Karl Albrecht Oberg, German SS officer and Police Leader in Galicia and France
Otto Ohlendorf (d. 1951), German Einsatzgruppe D commander
Shunei Okawa, Japanese railroad agent in Manchuria
Martinus Johannes van Oort, Dutch war criminal
Tihomir Orešković, Croatian official, sentenced to 15 years for the Gospić massacre
Hiroshi Oshima (1886-1975), Japanese ambassador to Germany
Adolf Ott, German Einsatzegruppe B official
Friedrich Panzinger (d. 1959), German RSHA official
Franz von Papen (1879-1969), German diplomat and deputy chancellor
Cemal Pasha Ottoman Minister of the Interior, sentenced to death
Enver Pasha Ottoman Minister of War, sentenced to death
Talat Pasha Ottoman Minister of Interior Affairs, sentenced to death
Auke Pattist, Dutch war criminal
Joachim Peiper (1915-1976) SS-Standartenführer, 1st SS Panzer Division, Leibstandarte-SS Adolf Hitler, held responsible for the Malmedy massacre during the Malmedy massacre trial
Henri Philippe Petain (1856-1951), Marshal of France and head of the collaborative Vichy France, sentenced to death first, then life imprisonment
Biljana Plavšić (b. 1930), Bosnian Serb politician and former president of the Republika Srpska. Sentenced to 11 years[25]
Paul Pleiger (1899-1985), German state adviser and corporate general director, sentenced to 15 years
Oswald Pohl (d. 1951), German WVHA official
Hermann Pook, German WVHA official
Dragoljub Pricac, Bosnian Serb, sentenced to 5 years for Omarska camp[16]
Emil Puhl, German Reichsbank official, sentenced to 5 years
Karl Rademacher, German Foreign Office official
Waldemar von Radetzky, German Einsatzgruppe B official
Mlado Radić, Bosnian Serb, sentenced to 20 years for Omarska camp[16]
Erich Raeder (1876-1960), German grand admiral, sentenced to life imprisonment, later released
Friedrich Rainer (1903-1947?), German Gauleiter and an Austrian Landeshauptmann of Salzburg and Carinthia, sentenced to death
Ivica Rajić (b. 195😎, Bosnian Croat sentenced to 12 years[26]
Karl Rasche, German Dresdner Bank official
Sigmund Racher, German medical officer involved in medical experiments in the Dachau concentration camp
Hanns Albin Rauter (d. 1949), German Higher SS and Police Leader in Holland, sentenced to death
Hermann Reinecke (1888-1973), German OKW official, sentenced to life imprisonment, later released
Hans Reinhardt, German commander of Panzer Group 3, Army Group Center and 3rd Panzer Army
Hans Reiter (1881-1969), German SS officer and involved in medical experiments at the Buchenwald concentration camp, sentenced
Lothar Rendulic (1887-1971), German commander of 52nd Infantry Division, sentenced to 20 years (later 10)
Joachim von Ribbentrop (1893-1946), German foreign minister, sentenced to death
Karl Ritter, German foreign office official
Mario Roatta, Italian chief of staff and head of the secret police
Henrick Rogstad (d. 1945), Norwegian collaborator and SS security police chief
Karl von Roques (d. 1949), German Rear Area Army Group South commander
Gerhard Rose, German official to the Robert Koch/Division of Tropical Medicine, sentenced to life, later 20 years
Wilhelm Rosenbaum, German SS officer
Alfred Rosenberg (1893-1946), German east minister, sentenced to death
Oswald Rothaug, German judiciary official
Curt Rothenburger, German justice ministry official
Heinz Rothke, German SS deportation expert in France
Felix Ruehl, German Einsatzgruppe D official
Obed Ruzindana, Rwandan businessman involved in the Rwandan Genocide, sentenced to 25 years
Risto Ryti (1889-1956), Finnish premier (1939-1940) and president (1940-1944), convicted for crimes against peace, 10 year hard labor, pardoned 1949
Dinko Šakić, Croat government official of Independent State of Croatia (NDH) and former administrator of the Jasenovac concentration camp.
Vladimir Šantić (b. 195😎, Bosnian Croat sentenced to 25, changed to 18 years following appeal[14][15]
Hans von Salmuth, German commander of the 30th Corps, 11th Army and Second Army, and Army Group Center
Martin Sandburger, German Einsatzgruppe A official
Fritz Sauckel (Fritz Saukel) (d. 1946), German Labor Plenipotentiary official
Anthony Sawoniuk (1921-2005), Polish collaborator
Hjalmar Schacht (1877-1970), German Reichsbank official
Emanuel Schafer, German BdS official in Serbia
Gustav Adolf Scheel (1907-1979), German physician and Nazi deportation officer
Rudolf Scheide, German WVHA official
Walter Schellenberg (d. 1952), German RSHA official
Conrad Heinrich Schellong, Sachsenburg and Dachau concentration camp official
Baldur von Schirach (1907-1974), German Vienna Reichsstatthalter
Franz Schlegelberger (1876-1970), German State Secretary in the Reich Ministry of Justice (RMJ) and later Justice Minister
Paul Schmidt, German Foreign Office press official
Hermann Schmitz, German I.G. Farben official
Heinrich Schwarz (1906-1947), German administrator of the Auschwitz III Monowitz concentration camp
Georg von Schnitzler, German director of I.G. Farben
Gertrud Scholtz-Klink, German leader of German Women
Karl Schongarth, German BdS Holland and BdS Generalgouverment official
Oskar Schroder, German Air Force Medical Service official
Heinz Hermann Schubert, German Einsatzgruppe C official
Erwin Schulz, German Einsatzgruppe C official
Willi Seibert, German Einsatzgruppe D official
Siegfried Seidl (1911-1947), German administrator of the Theresienstadt concentration camp
Artur Seyss-Inquart (1892-1946), Austrian government official, collaborator and High Commissioner of the Netherlands
Mamoru Shigemitsu (1887-1957), Japanese foreign minister
Wolfram Sievers (d. 194😎, German Ahnenerbe official
Duško Sikirica (b. 1964), Bosnian Serb, sentenced to 15 years for Keraterm camp[9]
Blagoje Šimić (b. 1960), Bosnian Serb sentenced to 17 years for Bosanski Šamac[27]
Milan Šimić (b. 1960), Bosnian Serb sentenced to 5 years[28]
Gustav Simon, German chief of civil administration in Nazi-occupied Luxembourg
Franz Six, German Vorkommando Maskau official
Veselin Šljivančanin, Serb Colonel convicted to 5 years for the Vukovar massacre[23]
Toon Soetebier, Dutch war criminal
Vladimir Sokolov, Russian journalist and German collaborator who published a pro-Nazi newspaper in the Nazi-occupied Soviet Union
Max Sollmann, German Lebensborn official
Karl Sommer, German WVHA official
Albert Speer (1905-1981), German armament and munitions minister
Wilhelm Speidel, German commander in Nazi-occupied Greece
Jakob Sporrenberg, German SS and Police Leader in Lublin
Franz Walter Stahlecker (d. 1942), German Foreign Office official
Milomir Stakić (b. 1962), Bosnian Serb sentenced to life imprisonment for war crimes in Prijedor and nearby concentration camps[29]
Franz Stangl (1908–1971) German SS officer and administrator of the Sobibór and of the Treblinka concentration camps.
Adolf Steengracht von Moyland, German foreign office official
Eugen Steimele, German Einsatzgruppe B official
Otto Steinbrinck (1888-1949), German industrialist and member of the SS
Eduard Strauch, German Einsatzgruppe A official
Julius Streicher (1885-1946), German journalist and editor of the Der Sturmer
Arnold Strippel, Majdanek prison guard
Jürgen Stroop (d. 1951), German SS and Police leader in Warsaw
Pavle Strugar (b. 1933), Serb general in the Siege of Dubrovnik. Sentenced to 8 years[30]
Wilhelm Stuckart (d. 1953), German Interior Ministry official
Otto von Stulpnagel (d. 194😎, German military commander of Nazi-occupied France
Karol Swerczewski (General Walter), Generalmajor 2. Polish Army 1944/45, Katyn 1940
Ferenc Szalasi (1897-1946), Hungarian head of state
Dome Sztojay (d. 1946), Hungarian prime minister
Duško Tadić, Bosnian Serb sentenced to 25 years[31]
Miroslav Tadić (b. 1937), Bosnian Serb sentenced to 8 years for Bosanski Šamac[27]
Takejiro Onishi, (d. c. 1945), Japanese vice admiral who created the Kamikaze suicide attacks
Väinö Tanner (Alfred Tanner) (1881-1966), Finland finance minister
Fritz Ter Meer, German I.G. Farben official
Josef Terboven (1898-1945), German Nazi commissioner of Norway
Eberhard von Thadden (1906-1947), German foreign office official
Otto Thierack (1889-1946), German justice minister
Max Thomas, German BdS official in Ukraine
Fritz Thyssen (1873–1951), German industrialist
Stevan Todorović, Bosnian Serb sentenced to 10 years for Bosanski Šamac[32]
Hideki Tojo, (1884-194😎, Japanese prime minister
Tokuda Hisakichi, Japanese Shingawa Prison medical officer
Antoine Touseul, Dutch war criminal
Erwin Tschentscher, German WVHA official
Harald Turner, Serbian military governor official


Siegfried Uiberreither (1908-1984?/1986?), German Gauleiter in Styria, Austria
Aquilin Ulrich, German doctor involved in Nazi euthanasia of handicaped in 1940-1941
Xaiver Vallat, French collaborator and anti-Jewish commissioner
Mitar Vasiljević, Bosnian Serb sentenced to 20 years, later lowered to 15 years for war crimes in Višegrad[33]
Leo Volk, German WVHA official
Zoran Vuković (b. 1955), Bosnian Serb sentenced to 12 years[17]
Anton van der Waals, Dutch war criminal
Wada Shusuke, Japanese translator convicted of mistreating prisoners of war, of which 450 out of 1,690 survived, while onboard a Japanese troop ship
Gerhard Wagner (1888-1939), German Reich Doctors' Leader (Reichsärzteführer)
Horst Wagner, German Foreign Office official
Robert Wagner (1895-1946), German Chief of Civil Administration in Alsace and Reichsstatthalter of Baden
Edward Waiter (d. 1945), German administrator of the Dachau concentration camp
Fritz Walther (d. 1946), German railroad official
Frank Walus, Accused Nazi collaborator while living in native Poland
Walter Warlimont (1894-1976), German OKW official
Maximilian von Weichs (1881-1954), German general
Henry Wirz (1822-1865), Confederate administrator of the Andersonville Camp
Fritz Weiedemann, German Council-General and Nazi spy
Ernst von Weizsacker, German Foreign Office official
Gustav Wilhaus, German officer in the Janovsky concentration camp
Max Winkler (1875-1961), German Main Trusteeship Office East official
Dieter Wiesliceny (d. 194😎, German SS deportation expert in Greece, Slovakia and Hungary
Otto Wohler, German 11th Army officer
Karl Wolff (1900-1984), Heinrich Himmler Chief of Staff
Ernst Wormann, German Foreign Office official
Karl Wuster, German I.G. Farben official
Tomoyuki Yamashita (1885–1946),.
Hiempsal, (117 BC), co-ruler of Numidia
François Darlan, (1942), senior figure of Vichy France
Maurice Audin, (1957), communist mathematician
Mohamed Khemisti, (1963), Algerian foreign minister
Mustafa Bouyali, (1987), Islamic fundamentalist
Mohamed Boudiaf, (1992), President of Algeria
Youcef Sebti, (1993), poet
Kasdi Merbah, (1993), former Prime Minister of Algeria
Abdelkader Alloula, (1994), playwright
Cheb Hasni, (1994), singer
Lounès Matoub, (199😎, singer
Abdelkader Hachani, (1999), Islamic fundamentalist
Louis Rwagasore, (1961), Prime Minister of Burundi
Jean Nduwabike, (1962), trade union leader
Gabriel Gihimbare, (1964), first Roman Catholic bishop of Hutu descent
Pierre Ngendandumwe, (1965), Prime Minister of Burundi
Joseph Bamina, (1965), Prime Minister of Burundi
Paul Mirerekano, (1965), leading Burundian politician
Gervais Nyangoma, (1965), politician
Martin Ndayahoze, (1972), leading army commander and information minister
Ntare V, (1975), dethroned King of Burundi (disputed circumstances)
Melchior Ndadaye, (1993), President of Burundi, Founder of The Burundi Workers' Party
Gilles Bimazubute, (1993),
Kassi Manlan, (2001), World Health Organisation representative
Pompey the Great, (48 BC), Roman politician killed in Egypt
Germanicus, (19), Roman military leader
Al-Afdal Shahanshah, (1121), vizier of Fatimid Egypt
Al-Amir, (1130), Fatimid Caliph
Qutuz, (1260), Mamluk sultan of Egypt
Khalil, (1293), Mamluk sultan of Egypt
Jean Baptiste Kléber, (1800), French general
Boutros Ghali, (1910), Prime Minister of Egypt
Sir Lee Stack, (1924), Governor-General of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
Walter Edward Guinness, Lord Moyne, (1944), the UK's Minister Resident in the Middle East
Ahmed Maher Pasha, (1945), Prime Minister of Egypt
Mahmud Fahmi Nokrashi, (194😎, Prime Minister of Egypt
Hassan al-Banna, (1949), founder of the Muslim Brotherhood
Anwar Sadat, (1981), President of Egypt
Rifaat al-Mahgoub, (1990), speaker of Egyptian parliament
Farag Foda, (1992), Egyptian politician and intellectual
Shaka, (182😎, king of the Zulus, near Stanger (now KwaDukuza) by Dingane and Mhlangana
Mhlangana, (182😎, Zulu prince murdered by Dingane. Shaka, Mhlangana, Dingane, Mpande and others were half-brothers, sons of a Zulu chief Senzangakhona with different his different wives.
Hendrik Verwoerd, (1966), Prime Minister of South Africa, stabbed in parliament by Dimitri Tsafendas
Onkgopotse Tiro, (1974), South African student leader
Steve Biko, 1977, anti-apartheid activist
Ruth First, (1982), anti-apartheid scholar and wife of Communist party leader Joe Slovo, by pro-apartheid "Koevoet" leader Craig Williamson
Vernon Nkadimeng, (1985), South African dissident
Dulcie September, (198😎, head of the African National Congress in Paris, by South African Defense Force sergeant Joseph Klue
Chris Hani, (1993), leader of the South African Communist Party shot by Janusz Walus
Johan Heyns, (1995), prominent leader in the Dutch Reformed Church
Jorge Eliécer Gaitán, (194😎, Liberal Party leader
Rodrigo Lara Bonilla, (1984), Minister of Justice
Tulio Manuel Castro Gil, (1985), Superior Judge of the Bogota Circuit
Alfonso Reyes Echandía, (1985), President of the Supreme Court
Manuel Gaona Cruz, (1985), Supreme Court Justice
Carlos Medellín Forero, (1985), Supreme Court Justice
Ricardo Medina Moyano, (1985), Supreme Court Justice
José Eduardo Gnecco Correa, (1985), Supreme Court Justice
Alfonso Patiño Roselli, (1985), Supreme Court Justice
Pedro Elías Serrano, (1985), Supreme Court Justice
Fabio Calderón Botero, (1985), Supreme Court Justice
Darío Velásquez Gaviria, (1985), Supreme Court Justice
Horacio Montoya Gil, (1985), Supreme Court Justice
Fanny González Franco, (1985), Supreme Court Justice
Dante Luis Fiorillo Porras, (1985), Supreme Court Justice
Hernando Baquero Borda, (1986), Supreme Court Justice
Jaime Ramírez Gómez, (1986), Head of Antinarcotics Police
Jaime Pardo Leal, (1987), Presidential candidate, leader of the Patriotic Union party
Guillermo Cano Isaza, (1986), Director of El Espectador newspaper
Carlos Mauro Hoyos, (198😎, Chief District Attorney
José Antequera, (1989), Senator, member of the Patriotic Union party
Antonio Roldán Betancur, (1989), Governor of Antioquia
Valdemar Franklin Quintero, (1989), Chief of Police of Antioquia
Luis Carlos Galán, (1989), Presidential candidate, leader of the Colombian Liberal Party
Carlos Ernesto Valencia, (1989), Superior Judge of the Bogota Circuit
Jorge Enrique Pulido, (1989), notable Journalist and director of the JEP media network
Bernardo Jaramillo Ossa, (1990), Presidential candidate, leader of the Patriotic Union party
Carlos Pizarro Leongómez, (1990), Presidential candidate, leader of the M-19 party
Diana Turbay (1991), journalist and daughter of former Colombian president Julio César Turbay Ayala
Enrique Low Murtra, Minister of Justice
Myriam Rocío Vélez, Superior Judge of the Bogota Circuit
Andrés Escobar, (1994), International footballer
Manuel Cepeda Vargas, (1994), Senator, leader of the Patriotic Union party
Alvaro Gómez Hurtado, (1995), former presidential candidate and director of El Nuevo Siglo newspaper
Rodrigo Turbay Cote, (1996), Congressman, former president of the House of Representatives
Fernando Landazábal Reyes, (199😎, Minister of Defense
Eduardo Umaña Mendoza, (199😎, union leader and human rights activist, former advisor to the Patriotic Union party
Jaime Garzón, (1999), Notable journalist and satirist
Crispiniano Quiñones (2000), retired Army general, former commander of the 13th Army Brigade
Isaias Duarte Cancino, 2002, Roman Catholic archbishop
Guillermo Gaviria Correa, (2003), Governor of Antioquia
Gilberto Echeverry Mejía, (2003), former Minister of Defense and peace advisor to the governor of Antioquia
Joseph Smith, Jr., (1844), Mayor of Nauvoo, Illinois and presidential candidate and LDS church leader.
Charles Bent, (1847), Governor of the New Mexico Territory
James Strang, (1856), Michigan State Representative
Abraham Lincoln, (1865), President of the United States
John P. Slough, (1867), Chief Justice of the New Mexico Supreme Court
Thomas Hindman, (186😎, Confederate General
James Hinds, (186😎, U.S. Congressman killed by members of the Ku Klux Klan
Edward Dexter Holbrook, (1870), Congressional Delegate from the Idaho Territory
James Garfield, (1881), President of the United States
Jesse James, (1882), notorious outlaw
John M. Clayton (Arkansas), (1889), Congressman from Arkansas
David Hennessey, (1890), Police Chief of New Orleans
Carter Harrison, Sr., (1893), Mayor of Chicago
William Goebel, (1900), Governor of Kentucky
William McKinley, (1901), President of the United States
Frank Steunenberg, (1905), former governor of Idaho
Don Mellett, (1926), newspaper editor and campaigner against organized crime
Anton Cermak, (1933), mayor of Chicago
Huey P. Long, (1935), Louisiana senator and former governor
Walter Liggett, (1935), Minnesota newspaper editor
Carlo Tresca, (1943), anarchist organizer
Albert Patterson, (1954), Alabama Attorney General
Curtis Chillingworth, (1955), a Florida judge
John F. Kennedy, (1963), President of the United States
Lee Harvey Oswald, (1963), alleged assassin of John F. Kennedy
Medgar Evers, (1963), U.S. civil rights activist
Malcolm X, (1965), black Muslim leader, killed in a Manhattan banquet room as he began a speech
George Lincoln Rockwell, (1967), founder of the American Nazi Party
Martin Luther King, Jr., (196😎, U.S. civil rights activist
Robert F. Kennedy, (196😎, Presidential candidate and John F. Kennedy's younger brother, shot in Los Angeles
Fred Hampton, (1969), Deputy Chairman of the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party
Dan Mitrione, (1970), FBI agent and torture expert, killed by the guerrilla movement Tupamaros
Marcus Foster, (1973), School District Superintendent in Oakland CA, killed by members of the Symbionese Liberation Army
Don Bolles, (1976), Investigative reporter for Arizona Republic, killed in car bomb, Max Dunlap and James Robison convicted, alleged Mafia ties
Orlando Letelier, (1976), Chilean ambassador to the United States under the administration of Salvador Allende
Harvey Milk, (197😎, gay rights campaigner and city supervisor of San Francisco, California
George Moscone, (197😎, Mayor of San Francisco
Leo Ryan, (197😎, Congressman from California, killed as part of the Jonestown Massacre
John Wood, (1979), first US federal judge killed in the twentieth century
Russell G. Lloyd, Sr., (1980), Mayor of Evansville, Indiana
Allard K. Lowenstein, (1980), Congressman from New York
Alan Berg, (1984), radio talk-show host, killed by Neo-nazis
Chiang Nan, (1984), Taiwanese-American writer, allegedly killed by Kuomintang agents
Alex Odeh, (1985), Arab anti-discrimination group leader, killed when bomb exploded in his Santa Ana, California office
Alejandro González Malavé, (1986), famous undercover policeman, in Bayamón, Puerto Rico
Selena Quintanilla-Pérez, (1995), singer killed by former employee, Yolanda Saldívar
Tommy Burks, (199😎, Tennessee State Senator
James E. Davis, (2003) New York City Councilman assassinated by Othniel Askew, a political rival in the Council chambers in City Hall
Chauncey Bailey, (2007), journalist
Gordian III, (244), Roman emperor, near Circesium (modern day Abu Sera) by his troops
Faisal I, (1933), King of Iraq
Ghazi I, (1939), King of Iraq
Faisal II, (195😎, King of Iraq
Nuri Pasha as-Said, (195😎, Iraqi politician, and
Ibrahim Hashim, (195😎, Jordanian politician, prime minister several times between the 1930s and shortly before his death - the previous three were all killed during the July 14 military coup in Iraq
Abdul Razak al-Naif, (197😎, former Prime Minister of Iraq
Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, (1982), 4th President of Iraq
Mohammad Baqir al-Sadr, (1980), former Grand Ayatollah
Bint al-Huda, (1980), Iraqi educator and political activist she was killed by Saddam Hussein along with her brother, Ayatullah Sayyid Mohammad Baqir al-Sadr
Gen. Adnan Khairallah, (1989), former Deputy Commander in Chief of Iraq's armed forces and Defense Minister
Sayyid Mohammed Taqi al-Khoei,, (1994), Son of former Grand Ayatollah Abul Qasim Al-Musawi Al-Khoei
Gen.Barreq Abdallah, (1990), Commander Republican Gaurd.
Dr. Raji Al-tikriti, (1994), physician of the Iraqi Army, and physician of Saddam Hussein president Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr.
Sayyid Abul Majid al-Khoei,, (2003), Son of former Grand Ayatollah Abul Qasim Al-Musawi Al-Khoei
Mohammad Mohammad Sadeq al-Sadr, (1999), former [[Grand Ayatollah],killed in the Iraqi city of Najaf along with two of his sons.
Ali Garmaii, (1996), dissident Kurdish Iranian activist in Halabja
Mohammad Nanva, (1996), dissident Kurdish Iranian activist, in Sulaymaniyah
Aquila al-Hashimi, (2003), Iraqi Governing Council member
Sayed Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim, (2003), ayatollah
Sérgio Vieira de Mello, (2003), UN Special Representative in Iraq
Waldemar Milewicz, (2004), Polish journalist
Mounir Bouamrane, (2004), Algerian-Polish TV operator, killed alongside with Milewicz
Hatem Kamil, (2004), deputy governor of Baghdad Province
Ezzedine Salim, (2004), chairman of the Iraqi Governing Council
Barawiz Mahmoud, (2005), judge on the Iraqi Special Tribunal
Dhari Ali al-Fayadh, (2005), Iraqi MP
Adel Koskh Khabar and three brothers, (2005), leader of al-Ghadr Brigade
Ihab al-Sherif, (2005), Egyptian envoy to Iraq
Abdul Sattar Abu Risha, (2007), Sunni tribal leader
Emperor Sushun, (592), Emperor of Japan
The Sogas, (645), Japanese political family
Minamoto no Sanetomo, (1219), the third shogun of the Kamakura Shogunate
Mimura Iechika, daimyo, feudal leader in Japan
Matsudaira Hirotada, (1549), feudal leader in Japan
Ōuchi Yoshitaka, (1551), daimyo, feudal leader in Japan
Oda Nobuyuki, (1557), Japanese samurai, younger brother of Oda Nobunaga
Ashikaga Yoshiteru, (1565), Shogun, feudal leader in Japan
Yamanaka Shikanosuke, (157😎, Japanese samurai
Oda Nobunaga, (1582), samurai warlord
Shakushain, (1669), Ainu chief
Shimazu Nariaki, (185😎, Japanese daimyo in Satsuma Province, now Kagoshima prefecture
Hashimoto Sanai, (1859), Japanese political activist
Ii Naosuke, (1860), Japanese politician
Tokugawa Nariaki, (1860), Japanese daimyo, a relative of Tokugawa shoguns
Yoshida Toyo, (1862), Japanese political activist
Charles Lennox Richardson, (1862), English diplomat, by Shimazu Hisamitsu's samaurai in Namamugi. Called the Namamugi Incident
Serizawa Kamo, (1863), a chief of Shinsen-gumi
Ikeuchi Daigaku, (1864), Japanese politician
Kusaka Gennai, (1864), Japanese politician
Sakuma Shozan, (1864), Japanese politician
Sakamoto Ryoma, (1867), Japanese author
Yokoi Shonai, (1869), Japanese political activist
Okubo Toshimichi, (187😎, Prime Minister of Japan
Ito Hirobumi, (1909), First Prime Minister of Japan
Hara Takashi, (1921), Prime Minister of Japan
Hamaguchi Osachi, (1931), Prime Minister of Japan
Dan Takuma, (1932), zaibatsu leader
Inukai Tsuyoshi, (1932), Prime Minister of Japan
Takahashi Korekiyo, (1936), Prime Minister of Japan
Isoroku Yamamoto, (1943), Japanese Admiral
Inejiro Asanuma, (1960), Socialist Party of Japan chairman
Kazuo Nagano, (1985), Japanese chairman
Hitoshi Igarashi, (1991), translated The Satanic Verses into Japanese
Hideo Murai, (1995), one of the leading members of Aum Shinrikyo
Koki Ishii, (2002), Japanese politician
Iccho Itoh, (2007), Mayor of Nagasaki
Fernando Manuel de Bustamante, (1719), Spanish Governor-General of the Philippines
Diego Silang, (1763), early rebel leader
Antonio Luna, (1899), a leader of the Filipino army during Philippine-American War
Julio Nalundasan, (1935), Ilocos Congressman, young Ferdinand Marcos tried but acquitted for the slaying
Aurora Quezon, (1949), former First Lady of the Philippines
Ponciano Bernardo, (1949), mayor of then Philippine capital Quezon City
James Gordon, (1967), Olongapo City mayor
Juan M. Alberto, (1967), Catanduanes governor and GSIS president
Guillermo de Vega, (1975), Executive Secretary and Board of Censors head
Joe Lingad, (1980), former Pampanga governor
Benigno Aquino, Jr., (1983), senator and politician, leader of the opposition against Ferdinand Marcos
Cesar Climaco, (1984), Mayor of Zamboanga City and prominent opposition leader
Evelio Javier, (1986), Antique governor and ally of then presidential candidate Corazon Aquino
Emma Henry, (1986), police officer and film actress
Rolando Olalia, (1987), head of the Kilusang Mayo Uno
Lean Alejandro, (1987), prominent student activist leader
Jaime Ferrer, (1987), Interior and Local Government Cabinet Secretary
Roy Padilla, Sr., (198😎, Camarines Norte Governor, Father of Robin Padilla
James N. Rowe (1989), US Military advisor
Moises Espinosa, (1989), Masbate Congressman
Bonifacio D. Uy, 1989, Ilagan, Isabela mayor
Eduardo Batalla, (1989), AFP general
Oscar Florendo, (1990), AFP general and spokesperson
Francisco Abalos, (1992), Lanao del Norte governor
Jose M. Crisol, (1993), former Defense Department official, leading counter-insurgency tactician
Tito Espinosa, (1995), Masbate Congressman
Alberto Berbon, (1996), DZMM senior editor and journalist
Rolando Abadilla, (1996), controversial Marcos era military officer
Clarence Aragao, (1996), human rights lawyer
Marcial Punzalan, (2001), Quezon Congressman
Rodolfo Aguinaldo, (2001), former Cagayan governor and Congressman
Filemon 'Ka Popoy' Lagman, (2001), founder of the Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino (BMP)
Romulo Kintanar, (2003), leader of the New People's Army (NPA)
Arturo Tabara, (2004), leader of Revolutionary Workers' Party
Henry Lanot, (2004), former Pasig City Congressman
Romeo Sanchez and Abelardo Ladera, (2005), local Filipino politicians and
William Tadena, (2005), clergyman with the Philippine Independent Church, by anti-NPA vigilantes
Marlene Esperat, (2005), Sultan Kudarat journalist and Department of Agriculture officer
Fausto Seachon, (2005), former Masbate Congressman
Amir bin Muhammad Baraguir, (2006), Sultan of Maguindanao
Renato Marasigan, (2006), Pasig police chief
Fernando U. Batul, (2006), DYPR broadcast journalist/commentator, former Puerto Princesa City, Palawan vice-mayor
Noli Capulong, (2006), Bayan Muna activist and pastor
Sotero Llamas, (2006), former Rebel Leader, activist and former governatorial candidate of Albay
Delfinito Albano, (2006), Ilagan, Isabela Mayor
Alberto Ramento, (2006), bishop of the Philippine Independent Church
James Bersamin, (2006), Board Member of the 2nd District of Abra
Luis Bersamin, (2006), Congressman of Abra
Alioden Dalaig, (2007), Law Department Chief and Director of COMELEC
Joseph Del Rosario, (2007), COMELEC Officer from Cavite
Wahab Akbar, (2007), Congress Representative of Basilan
Charles d'Espagne, (1354), constable of France
Louis of Valois, Duke of Orléans, (1407)
John the Fearless, (1419)
Gaspard de Coligny, (1572)
Henri III, (1589), King of France
Henri IV, (1610), King of France
Jacques de Flesselles, (1789), Provost of Paris
Jean-Paul Marat, (1793), revolutionary
Marie François Sadi Carnot, (1894), President of France
Jean Jaurès, (1914), politician, pacifist; his assassin, Raoul Villain, would be assassinated himself in Spain in 1936
Gaston Calmette, (1914), editor of Le Figaro newspaper, by the wife of the minister of Finance Joseph Caillaux
Marius Plateau, (1923), secretary of Action Française
Paul Doumer, (1932), President of France
Louis Barthou, (1934), foreign minister of France killed along with King Alexander I of Yugoslavia at Marseille
Ernst vom Rath, (193😎, German diplomat in France
François Darlan, (1942), admiral of the Fleet and former Prime Minister of Vichy governement, by a young monarchist in Algiers
Maurice Sarraut, (1943), editor of La Dépêche newspaper and former leader of Radical-Socialist Party, by miliciens in Toulouse
Constant Chevillon, (1944), head of FUDOFSI, by Gestapo in Lyon
Philippe Henriot, (1944), State secretary for Information and Propaganda of Vichy governement, by french resistants in Paris
Georges Mandel, (1944), former radical-socialist minister and french resistant, by miliciens in forest of Fontainebleau
Eugène Deloncle, (1944), milicien and former leader of clandestine far-right organisation La Cagoule, by Gestapo
Camille Blanc, (1961), mayor of Evian
Mehdi Ben Barka, (1965), Moroccan socialist leader and Third-World Tricontinental leader, disappeared in Paris
Outel Bono, (1973), Chadian medical doctor and anti-Tombalbaye activist
Oktay Cerit, (1976), First Secretary of Turkish Embassy, by an unknown assailant. The Secret Armenian Army is suspected.
Jean de Broglie, (1976), former minister and one of the french negotiators of the Évian Accords
Henri Curiel, (197😎, anticolonialist activist
José Miguel Beñaran Ordeñana "Argala", (197😎, Basque leader
Pierre Goldman, (1979), left-wing activist
Robert Boulin, (1979), minister of Labor and many times minister since 1961. Officially suicide, but lot of anomalies revealed since.
Joseph Fontanet, (1980), former minister
Salah al-Din Bitar, (1980), Syrian Baath politician
Yehia El-Mashad, (1980), Egyptian atomic scientist.
Jean-Pierre Maïone-Libaude, (1982), right-wing activist and criminal
Pierre-Jean Massimi, (1983), secretary of the département Haute-Corse
René Audran, (1985), general, by far-left activists of Action directe
Georges Besse, (1986), Renault executive, by far-left activists of Action directe
André Mécili ("Ali Mécili"), (1987), Algerian opposition leader, in France
Dulcie September, (198😎, African National Congress representative, in Paris
Joseph Doucé, (1990), activist for sexual minorities
Shapour Bakhtiar, (1991), Prime Minister of Iran briefly in 1979, stabbed to death at his home in France
Abdelbaki Sahraoui, (1995), co-founder of the Algerian Islamic Salvation Front, in Paris
Claude Erignac, (199😎, prefect of Corsica
Didier Contant, (2004), journalist, grand reporter, former editor in chief of Gamma
Robert Feliciaggi, (2006), Corsican MP, in Ajaccio
Alexander Severus, (235), Roman emperor, near Moguntiacum (present-day Mainz) by his troops
Postumus, (26😎, Gallic emperor, in Mainz
Laelianus, (26😎, Gallic emperor, in Mainz
Philipp von Hohenstaufen, (120😎, Emperor, in Bamberg
Engelbert I. von Köln, (1225), Archbishop of Cologne
Konrad von Marburg, (1233), inquisitor
Johann Windlock, (1356), Bishop of Constance
Kaspar Hauser, (1833), purported son of Karl, Grand Duke of Baden
Kurt Eisner, (1919), Prime Minister of Bavaria
Talat Pasha, (1921), former Ottoman Minister of Interior Affairs, in Berlin by Soghomon Tehlirian
Matthias Erzberger, (1921), politician
Walther Rathenau, (1922), industrialist and politician
Dr Erich Klausener, (1934), Minister of Police
Gustav von Kahr, (1934), politician
General Kurt von Schleicher, (1934), advisor to Reich President Paul von Hindenburg
Salah Ben Youssef, (1961), Tunisian politician, in Frankfurt
Belkacem Krim, (1970), Algerian politician
Günter von Drenkmann, (1974), Berlin chief justice
Siegfried Buback, (1977), German attorney general
Jürgen Ponto, (1977), CEO Dresdner Bank
Hanns-Martin Schleyer, (1977), president of the German employers' organization
Heinz-Herbert Karry, (1981), Minister of Economy in Hesse
Ernst Zimmermann, (1985), industrialist
Karl Heinz Beckurts, (1986), Siemens executive
Gerold von Braunmühl, (1986), official in the German Foreign Ministry
Alfred Herrhausen, (1989), Deutsche Bank CEO
Detlev Karsten Rohwedder, (1991), director of Treuhandanstalt for former East Germany
Sadeq Sharafkandi, Fattah Abdoli, Homayoun Ardalan, Nouri Dehkordi, (1992), dissident Kurdish Iranian political leaders, in Berlin (Mykonos restaurant assassinations)
Titus Tatius, (748 BC), Sabine king, in Rome
Lucius Tarquinius Priscus, (579 BC), Etruscan king of Rome, in Rome by the sons of Ancus Marcius
Servius Tullius, (534 BC), Etruscan king of Rome, in Rome by Tarquin II
Tiberius Gracchus, (133 BC), Roman tribune, in Rome by Roman senators
Julius Caesar, (44 BC), Roman general and dictator, in Rome by members of the Roman Senate
Cicero, (43 BC), Roman orator, outside of Rome under orders from Mark Antony
Caligula, (41), Roman Emperor, in Rome by Cassius Chaerea through a conspiracy with the Praetorian guard and the Senate
Claudius, (54), Roman Emperor, poisoned in Rome by his wife, Agrippina
Vitellius, (69), Roman Emperor, in Rome by the Flavian army
Galba, (69), Roman Emperor, in Rome by the Praetorian Guard under orders from Otho
Domitian, (96), Roman Emperor, in Rome by Stephanus, steward to Julia Flavia
Commodus, (192), Roman Emperor, killed in Rome by Narcissus the wrestler
Pertinax, (193), Roman Emperor, in Rome by the Praetorian Guard
Didius Julianus, (193), Roman Emperor, in Rome by the Praetorian Guard
Publius Septimius Geta, (212), Roman Emperor, in Rome by centurions under orders of Caracalla
Caracalla, (217), Roman Emperor, between Edessa and Carrhae (modern-day Sanli Urfa and Harran) by Martialis, possibly under orders of Macrinus
Elagabalus, (222), Roman Emperor, in Rome by the Praetorian Guard under orders of Julia Maesa and Julia Mamaea
Maximinus Thrax, (23😎, Roman Emperor, outside Aquileia by his troops
Pupienus, (23😎, Roman Emperor, in Rome by the Praetorian Guard
Balbinus, (23😎, Roman Emperor, in Rome by the Praetorian Guard
Volusianus, (253), Roman Emperor, near Interamna by his troops
Trebonianus Gallus, (253), Roman Emperor, near Interamna by his troops
Aurelian, (275), Roman Emperor, near Caenophrurium (modern-day Corlu)
Florianus, (276), Roman Emperor, near Tarsus
Giuliano de' Medici, (147😎, co-ruler of Florence
Martin Bovelino (Martino Bovollino), (1531), envoy of the Grisons
Pellegrino Rossi, (184😎, Papal States Minister of Justice
Umberto I of Italy, (1900), king
Said Halim Pasha, (1921), former Ottoman Prime
Giacomo Matteotti, (1924), Italian socialist politician
Luigj Gurakuqi, (1925), Albanian independence leader, in Bari
Benito Mussolini, (1945), fascist Prime Minister of Italy
Enrico Mattei, (1962), Italian public head officer, head of Agip oil company, supported Algerian independence
Pier Paolo Pasolini, (1975), Italian writer, poet and film director
Aldo Moro, (197😎, former Prime Minister of Italy
Giuseppe Impastato, (197😎, Anti-mafia activist
Emilio Alessandrini, (1979), magistrate in Milano
Giorgio Ambrosoli, (1979), lawyer, liquidator of Banca Privata Italiana
Cesare Terranova, (1979), magistrate
Carlo Ghiglieno, (1979), Fiat manager
Italo Schettini, (1979), regional councillor of Democrazia cristiana
Carlo Alberto Dalla Chiesa, (1982), General of the carabinieri, indirectly investigating on the death of Enrico Mattei
Rocco Chinnici, (1983), magistrate
Leamon Hunt, (1984), U.S. chief of the Sinai Multinational Force and Observer Group (assassinated in Rome)
Antonio Saetta, (198😎, judge
Giovanni Trecroci, (1990), vice mayor of Villa San Giovanni
Giovanni Falcone, (1992), anti-mafia judge
Paolo Borsellino, (1992), anti-mafia judge
Salvatore Lima, (1992), mayor of Palermo
Pino Puglisi, (1993), priest
Massimo D'Antona, (1999), advisor of the Italian Minister of Labour
Marco Biagi, (2002), Italian Labor Ministry advisor
Peter III of Russia, (1762), Emperor of Russia
Paul of Russia, (1801), Emperor of Russia
Mikhail Andreyevich Miloradovich, (1825), military Governor of Saint Petersburg
Nikolay Vladimirovich Mezentsev, (187😎, Executive Director of the Third Section
Alexander II of Russia, (1881), Emperor of All the Russias
Dmitry Sipyagin, (1902), Russian Interior Minister
Vyacheslav Pleve, (1904), Russian Interior Minister
Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich Romanov, (1905), former Governor-General of Moscow
Peter Stolypin, (1911), Russian Prime Minister
Grigori Rasputin, (1916), controversial friar and mystic
Tsar Nicholas II and his family: Tsarina Alexandra, Tsarevich Aleksey, and the Grand Duchesses Anastasia, Tatiana, Olga and Maria (191😎
V. Volodarsky, (191😎, revolutionary
Wilhelm Mirbach, (191😎, German Ambassador in Moscow
Fatali Khan Khoyski, (1920), former Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of Azerbaijan, in Tbilisi
Simon Petlyura, (1926), Ukrainian independence leader
Sergei Kirov, (1934), Bolshevik party leader in Leningrad
Giorgi Chanturia, (1994), Georgian opposition leader
Vladislav Listyev, (1995), a Russian journalist and head of the ORT TV Channel
Dzhokhar Dudayev, (1996), first Chechen separatist President and anti-Russian guerrilla leader
Galina Starovoitova, (199😎, influential politician, then member of Russian parliament (Duma)
Ruslan Chimayev, (199😎, Chechen rebel politician
Otakhon Latifi, (199😎, Tajik journalist and opposition figure
Vazgen Sargsyan, (1999), Prime Minister of Armenia
Karen Demirchyan, (1999), speaker of Armenian parliament
Leonard Petrosyan, (1999), Karabakh politician
Georgiy Gongadze, (2000), Ukrainian journalist
Valentin Tsvetkov, (2002), governor of Magadan
Sergei Yushenkov, (2003), Russian politician, in Moscow [1]
Yuri Shchekochikhin, (2003), Russian journalist, in Moscow [2]
Georgy Tal, (2004), leading Russian businessman
Paul Klebnikov, (2004), editor of the Russian edition of Forbes magazine
Akhmad Kadyrov, (2004), Kremlin-backed President of the Chechen Republic
Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev, (2004), former President of separatist Chechnya
Aslan Maskhadov, (2005), President of separatist Chechnya
Anatoly Trofimov, (2005), former FSB deputy director
Elmar Huseynov, (2005), Azerbaijani journalist
Zhirgalbek Surabaldiyev, (2005), Kyrgyz MP and businessman
Magomed Omarov, (2005), deputy Interior Minister of Dagestan
Bayaman Erkinbayev, (2005), Kyrgyz MP
Altynbek Sarsenbayev, (2006), Kazakh politician
Abdul-Khalim Sadulayev, (2006), President of separatist Chechnya
Anna Politkovskaya, (2006), Russian journalist and human rights campaigner.

Please note that included above are hundreds of known war criminals, murderers and pedophiles. Due to this and the vastness of the list, there exists the possibility that Kemal Ataturk was still accidentally included several times.