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20st Century ~ Century of Violence.~

In ancient times during war, soldiers fought on the battlefield corp, face-to-face with the enemy. It was brutal, horrific, and bloody.  War was fought over reasons as ancient as man and still true today; Wealth and Power.

A politician once said, "The United States has no friend, only interest."  It is valid for all countries and men. The mass killing also increased with great leaps forward in technology and science. Unless you are Mother Theresa, Man's agenda is always more than just philanthropic. 

Genocide: among other things, the killing of people by a government because of their indelible group membership (race, ethnicity, religion, language). 

Politicide: the murder of any person or people by a government because of their politics or for political purposes.Mass Murder: the indiscriminate killing of any person or people by a government.

Democide: The murder of any person or people by a government, including genocide, politicide, and mass murder.                  
The 20th Century was one of the most ruthless centuries. Dominated by ethnic war and massacre. All continents produced perpetrators of genocide as well as dissenters. The technology, scale, and intensity of this violence were all new. At least 30 million people perished in genocides across the globe. Some were sudden or concentrated outbursts of mass murder, like those committed by the Young Turks in 1915 (visit my Armenian Genocide post), the Nazis in the second world war, the Khmer Rouge in 1975-79, or Rwanda's Hutu-power regime in just three months in 1994.
Other genocides were gradual and prolonged. In the Soviet Union, Stalin's regime of terror rose and fell incrementally, over nearly three decades, before and after his homicidal frenzy of the 1930s. Maoism and its Chinese and Japanese enemies subjected China to irregular cycles of deadly violence from the 1920s to the 1970s, peaking in a regime-made famine that killed tens of millions in the 1950s. Third-world populations suffered long and hard under smaller but equally relentless killer regimes like that of Kim Il-sung in North Korea, where repression and starvation escalated under his son, Kim Jong-il. (visit my North Korean post)

After a United States-sponsored coup ended a democratic era in Guatemala in 1954, murderous political repression plagued that country until 1996, persisting even after its intense genocidal phase of 1981-83. Extermination in East Timor began with the Indonesian invasion of 1975, reached its zenith in 1978-80, and continued sporadically until Jakarta's violent withdrawal in 1999. Mass killing in Sudan has gathered since 1982, with its Islamist regime taking 2 million victims by 2006, first Christians and animists, then black Muslims in Darfur.


The 21st Century could be just as bleak. After the cold war ended in 1989, new flashpoints emerged. International communist regimes like the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and Czechoslovakia collapsed in the ethnic division, as did their allies Afghanistan and Ethiopia. Armed territorial secession threatened other large multi-ethnic states like Indonesia and Congo. Following the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, ethnic violence spread to Burundi and to Congo, where a new genocide erupted. Ethnic-cleansing campaigns in the Caucasus and Chechnya cleared the ground for recent conflicts that resist solutions. Vicious al-Qaida terrorism targets civilians from Manhattan to Madrid, Morocco to the Moro region of the Philippines. Muslim-Christian violence has erupted in Indonesia, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Iraq. Threats loom in rising anti-immigrant, nativist, and religious fundamentalist movements from western Europe to east Asia. A deepening divide in China, Islamic rebellions in southern Thailand and the Philippines, murderous insurgency and repression in Iraq, the international and domestic crisis in North Korea, continuing ethnopolitical dissension in Afghanistan and suppression in Burma, and brutal national-religious conflicts in Kashmir and Sri Lanka all bode ill for 21st-century ethnic conciliation.
                    
The following are not only numbers; behind each is the face of a human being,; men, women, children, young and old. It may be challenging to understand the atrocity hiding in these numbers. But with the constant bombardment of violence in the media, one may become desensitized and detached. My goal is to keep what is good, compassionate, and our sense of right and wrong alive, to choose to act rather than stay on the sidelines and watch it happen.

Statistics.
  • Mao Ze-Dong: China, 1958-61 and 1966-69, Tibet 1949-50 49-78,000,000
  • Jozef Stalin: USSR, 1932-39  the purges plus Ukraine's famine 23,000,000
  • Adolf Hitler: Germany, 1939-1945 concentration camps and civilians WWII 12,000,000 
  • Leopold II: Belgium Congo, 1886-1908 8,000,000
  • Hideki Tojo: Japan, civilians in WWII 1941-44 5,000,000
  • Ismail Enver: Turkey, 1915-20 1,200,000
  • Pol Pot: Cambodia, 1975-79 1,700,000
  • Kim Il Sung: North Korea, purges and concentration camps 1948-94 1.6 million
  • Menghistu: Ethiopia, 1975-78 1,500,000
  • Yakubu Gowon: Biafra, 1967-1970 1,000,000
  • Leonid Brezhnev: Afghanistan, 1979-1982 900,000
  • Jean Kambanda: Rwanda, 1994 800,000
  • Suharto: East Timor, West Papua, Communists, 1966-98 800,000
  • Saddam Hussein: Iran 1980-1990 and Kurdistan 1987-88 600,000
  • Tito: Yugoslavia, 1945-1987 570,000
  • Fumimaro Konoe: Japan, Chinese civilians1937-39 500,000?
  • Jonas Savimbi: Angola, 1975-2002 400,000
  • Taliban: Afghanistan, 1986-2001 400,000
  • Idi Amin: Uganda, 1969-1979 300,000
  • Yahya Khan: Pakistan, Bangladesh1970-71 300,000 
  • Benito Mussolini: Ethiopia, 1936; Libya, 1934-45; Yugoslavia, WWII 300,000
  • Mobutu Sese Seko: Zaire, 1965-97  ?
  • Charles Taylor: Liberia, 1989-1996 220,000
  • Foday Sankoh: Sierra Leone, 1991-2000 200,000
  • Michel Micombero: Burundi, 1972 150,000
  • Slobodan Milosevic: Yugoslavia, 1992-99 100,000
  • Hassan Turabi: Sudan, 1989-1999 100,000
  • Richard Nixon: Vietnam, Vietnamese civilians 1969-1974 70,000
  • Efrain Rios Montt: Guatemala, 1982-83 70,000
  • Papa Doc Duvalier: Haiti, 1957-71 60,000
  • Hissene Habre: Chad, 1982-1990 40,000
  • Vladimir Ilich Lenin: USSR, 1917-20 dissidents executed 30,000 
  • Francisco Franco: Spain dissidents executed after the civil war 30,000 
  • Fidel Castro: Cuba, 1959-1999 30,000
  • Lyndon Johnson: Vietnam, 1963-1968 30,000
  • Hafez Al-Assad: Syria, 1980-2000 25,000
  • Khomeini: Iran, 1979-89 20,000
  • Main sources:
  • Charny (1988) Genocide: A Critical Bibliographic Review 
  • Stephane Courtois: Black Book on Communism (1995)
  • Matthews: Guinness Book of Records (2000)
  • Clodfelter: Warfare and Armed Conflicts (1992)
  • Elliot: Twentieth Century Book of the Dead (1972)
  • Bouthoul: A List of the 366 Major Armed Conflicts of the period 1740-1974, Peace Research (1978)
  • R.J. Rummel: Death by Government - Genocide and Mass Murder (1994)
Matt White's website, Several general textbooks of 20th-century history

Comments

Anonymous said…
Love to read your article and Followed your updates at twitter. Keep writing Sibel.
HEALTH CARE said…
Hi thanks for stopping on my blog you have interesting blog...
Anonymous said…
I wrote a blog devoted to world peace. To me war is primitive and barbaric. What a contradiction for society to claim to be civilised and yet be willing to cause death and destruction.
magicdarts said…
Hi Paul here (aka Magicdarts) via Real bloggers united - Those really are incredible numbers when you think in terms of each father , child , mother and family behind them - as I believe Churchill once said we need more jaw jaw and less war war -I look forward to learning much more from you in the coming weeks and months
Blogger said…
hellow...This is my first visit
glad to be present here
nice blog..my friend
succesful!
Gary A. Gibson said…
A very powerful column on a topic that deals with some of the worst that humanity can offer. Thanks for bringing it up and putting such a strong focus on it. Keep up the good work.
Hello there, di you see this movie: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/worse-than-war/
La Crona said…
Hi Sibel!

What can we learn from this? We can learn that hate doesn´t solve a single conflict, violence just increase the on-going violence.What we need to do is to break this evil circle and spread love and peace instead.We can start with ourselves and strive for reconciliation with others.
admin said…
simple, but full of information....nice work, Sibel....

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