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Genocide perpetrators

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Genghis Khan
Genghis Khan, also known as Chinggis Khan, was the founder and first khan of the Mongol Empire. After spending most of his life uniting the Mongol tribes, he launched a series of military campaigns, conquering large parts of China and Central Asia.
Saddam Hussein
Saddam Hussein was an Iraqi politician and revolutionary who served as the fifth president of Iraq from 1979 until his overthrow in 2003 during the United States-led invasion of Iraq. He previously served as the vice president from 1968 to 1979 and also as the prime minister from 1979 to 1991 and later from 1994 to 2003. A leading member of the Ba'ath Party, he was a proponent of Ba'athism, a mix of Arab nationalism and Arab socialism. The policies and ideologies he championed are collectively known as Saddamism, a right-wing variant of Ba'athism.
Robert Mugabe
2nd President of Zimbabwe from 1987 to 2017
Pol Pot
former General Secretary of the Communist Party of Kampuchea (1925–1998)
Idi Amin
President of Uganda (1971-1979)
Omar al-Bashir
President of Sudan from 1989 to 2019
Catherine de' Medici
queen-consort and regent of France (1519–1589)
Hideki Tojo
Japanese general and politician (1884–1948)
Ahmed Shahe Durrani
founder of the Afghan Durrani Empire (r. 1747–1772)
Mengistu Haile Mariam
former General Secretary of the Workers' Party of Ethiopia
Bohdan Khmelnytsky
Ukrainian military, political and statesman, Hetman of the Zaporizhzhya Army, head of Ukraine (1648–1657) during the Hetmanship
Qianlong Emperor
emperor of the Qing Dynasty (1711–1799)
Rafael Trujillo
President of the Dominican Republic (1891-1961)
Ferdinand VI of Spain
king of Spain, lived (1713-1759)
François Duvalier
40th President of the Republic of Haiti (1907-1971)
Lazar Kaganovich
Soviet politician (1893–1991)
Jean-Jacques Dessalines
Leader of Haitian Revolution and first ruler of independent Haiti (1758-1806)
Menilek II
Emperor of Ethiopia and King of Shewa (1844-1913)
Charles Taylor
22nd president of Liberia
Abdur Rahman Khan
Emir of Afghanistan from 1880 to 1901
Scipio Aemilianus
Roman politician and general (185–129 BC)
Min Aung Hlaing
11th President of Myanmar
Abdel Fattah al-Burhan
President of the Sovereignty Council of Sudan
Yakubu Gowon
Nigerian politician and Military general
Alauddin Khalji
13th Sultan of the Delhi Sultanate and 2nd from the Khalji dynasty (1266-1316)
Michel Micombero
President of Burundi (1940-1983)
Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi
Nigerian military leader (1924-1966)
Egica
Egica, Ergica, or Egicca (c. 640 – 701/703), was the Visigoth King of Hispania and Septimania from 687 until his death. He was the son of Ariberga and the nephew of Wamba.
Rapid Support Forces
The Rapid Support Forces are a Sudanese paramilitary force formerly operated by the Sudanese government. They originated as auxiliary force militias known as the Janjaweed used by the Sudanese government during the War in Darfur, which the government later restructured as a paramilitary organization in August 2013 under the command of Muhammad Dagalo, better known by his nom de guerre Hemedti.
Popular Mobilization Forces
The Popular Mobilization Forces, also known as the Popular Mobilization Units (PMU), is an Iranian-backed paramilitary umbrella group that operates within Iraq. Although formally and legally part of the Iraqi Armed Forces and reporting directly to the prime minister, PMF leaders act independently from state control, and in practice, answer to the supreme leader of Iran.
Hari Singh I of Kashmir
Last King of Kashmir (1925-1952)
Charles Victoire Emmanuel Leclerc
French general (1772-1802)
Álvaro Holden Roberto
Angolan politician (1923-2007)
Stanislav Kosior
Soviet politician (1889-1939)
Elie Hobeika
Lebanese politician and militia commander (1956–2002)
Dhu Nuwas
Yemeni king, last ruler of Himyarite Kingdom
Salomon Morel
Holocaust survivor accused of war crimes by Polish government
Foday Sankoh
Sierra Leonean warlord (1937-2003)
Bagyidaw
Bagyidaw (, ; also known as Sagaing Min, ; 23 July 1784 – 15 October 1846) was the seventh king of the Konbaung dynasty of Burma from 1819 until his abdication in 1837. Prince of Sagaing, as he was commonly known in his day, was selected as crown prince by his grandfather King Bodawpaya in 1808, and became king in 1819 after Bodawpaya's death. Bagyidaw moved the capital from Amarapura back to Ava in 1823.
Chen Quanguo
Chinese politician
Vladimiro Montesinos
Lawyer and former de facto Chief of the National Intelligence Service of Peru
Pavel Postyshev
Soviet politician (1887-1939)
Vlas Chubar
Soviet politician (1891-1939)
Bakr Sidqi
Ottoman pasha and Iraqi general (1890-1937)
Ahmad Khomeini
Iranian politician
Muhammad Ahmad Mahgoub
Sudanese Prime Minister (1908-1976)
Filipp Goloshchyokin
Soviet politician (1876–1941)
Zenón de Somodevilla, 1st Marqués de la Ensenada
Spanish noble (1702-1781)
Ali Kuschaib
Sudanese war criminal
Donatien-Marie-Joseph de Rochambeau
French soldier (1755–1813)
Yusuf Karamanli
Pasha of tripolitania
Maksym Kryvonis
Ukrainian cossack
Ran Min
Emperor of the Chinese state of Ran Wei from 350 to 352
Nasuhzade Ali Pasha
Ottoman admiral
John Okello
East African revolutionary, leader of the Zanzibar Revolution (1937-1971)
Bedr Khan Beg
Kurdish emir (1803–1869)
Miguel Etchecolatz
Argentine former police officer convicted of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment (1929–2022)
Alexander Chaiko
Russian military officer
Mendel Khatayevich
Soviet politician (1893–1937)
Ivan Zolotarenko
Ukrainian Cossack leader (died 1655)