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Category

Collective punishment

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boycott
thumb|right|upright=1.1|Protesters advocating boycott of KFC due to [[animal welfare concerns]]
ethnic cleansing
various ways of displacing or exterminating human beings from another ethnic group from a territory
My Lai Massacre
1968 U.S. war crime during the Vietnam War
Xinjiang internment camps
Chinese concentration camps in XUAR province, where religious and ethnic repression is carried out against traditionally Muslim peoples, classified as ethnocide, ethnic cleansing and genocide
flight and expulsion of Germans
exodus & deportation during and after the end of the Second World War from 1945 to 1950
Fourth Geneva Convention
1949 treaty
massacre of Oradour-sur-Glane
642 French civilians massacred by a German Waffen-SS company in 1944
Emergency
21-month period in the history of India
internment of Japanese Americans
mass incarceration, in the US, of Japanese during WWII
reprisal
A reprisal is a limited and deliberate violation of international law to punish another sovereign state that has already broken them. Since the 1977 Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions (AP 1), reprisals in the laws of war are extremely limited, as they commonly breach the rights of non-combatants.
Nakam
thumb|upright=1.3|A US Army lieutenant (left) and a German detective inspecting the (Consumer Cooperative Bakery) in Nuremberg after a poisoning attempt Nakam (, 'revenge') was a paramilitary and terrorist organisation of about fifty Holocaust survivors who, after 1945, sought revenge for the murder of 6 million Jews during the Holocaust. Led by Abba Kovner, the group sought to kill six million Germans in a form of indiscriminate revenge, "a nation for a nation". Kovner went to Mandatory Palestine in order to secure large quantities of poison for poisoning water mains to kill large numbers of
Rape of Belgium
systematic war crimes against Belgian civilians during World War I
collective responsibility
philosophical, social and political concept describing responsibility of organizations, groups and societies
1991 Iraqi uprisings
anti-government uprisings in Ba'athist Iraq
Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip (2023–present)
Israeli siege of the Palestinian enclave since October 2023
collective punishment
punishment or sanction imposed on a group for acts by a member
Marzabotto massacre
world War II war crime
massacre at Huế
massacre in Vietnam War
Dujail Massacre
Iraqi massacre
Massacre at Béziers
1209 killing of Cathars during the Albigensian Crusade
Sippenhaft
Sippenhaft or Sippenhaftung (, kin liability) is a German term for the idea that a family or clan shares the responsibility for a crime or act committed by one of its members, justifying collective punishment. As a legal principle, it was derived from Germanic law in the Middle Ages, usually in the form of fines and compensations. It was adopted by Nazi Germany to justify the punishment of kin (relatives, spouse) for the offence of a family member. Punishment often involved imprisonment and execution, and was applied to relatives of the conspirators of the failed 1944 bomb plot to assassinate
German collective guilt
collective guilt attributed to Germany
Pirčiupiai
Pirčiupiai is a village in (Valkininkai) eldership, Varėna district municipality, Alytus County, Dzūkija region, Lithuania. According to the 2001 census, the village had a population of 103 people. At the 2011 census, the population was 75.
Jewish deicide
antisemitic theological view that all Jews are responsible for the Crucifixion of Jesus
Sant'Anna di Stazzema massacre
1944 war crimes committed in Tuscany, Italy
Israeli demolition of Palestinian property
war method used by the Israeli government against Palestinians
Tungchow Mutiny
assault on Japanese civilians and troops
Blood curse
concept in the New Testament concerning Jewish self-assumed responsibility for Jesus' death
Wawer massacre
execution against Poles by German Nazis (1939)
German-American internment
internment of German nationals and ethnic Germans in the United States during both World Wars
ancestral sin
doctrine that the sins of our ancestors lead to the punishment of their descendants
1987 Lieyu massacre
massacre of Vietnamese boat people by the Taiwanese Military
Nine familial exterminations
form of capital punishment in ancient China, Korea, and Vietnam, in which extended relatives of a person convicted of particularly serious crimes (treason, rebellion, etc.) would be executed together
Palestro Ambush
Order about Family Members of Traitors of the Motherland
Legal category in Russian SFSR
Boston Port Act
UK parliament act of 1774
Putten raid
1944 roundup
Operation Silbertanne
a series of murders committed in the 1940s in the German-occupied Netherlands in response to resistance activity
environmental impact of the Gaza war
pernicious influence of the armed conflict in part of Palestine on the ecology of the region
Sochy massacre
Polish civilians massacred by German SS, police
Pontianak incidents
Massacres in Kalimantan, Dutch East Indies by the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II
Kalagong massacre
Mass killing of civilians by Japanese troops in Burma on 7 July 1945
Bombardment of Barcelona
1842 bombardment
pacification actions in German-occupied Poland
Ploština
thumb|300px|Ploština memorial Ploština was a small settlement in what is today the municipality of Drnovice in the Zlín Region of the Czech Republic. On 19 April 1945, at the end of World War II, it was burned and its people were massacred by Nazis in response to their support of the anti-Nazi resistance movement. The massacre was conducted by the German special SS unit Zur besonderen Verwendung-Kommando Nr. 31, led by Walter Pawlofski, and by the SS anti-partisan unit Josef consisting of members of Slovak Hlinka-Guard, whose headquarters was in Vizovice.