A warlord is a person with power who has both military and civil
Dictators, as defined in the dictionary, is a person who rules with utter supremacy, and usually uses force to get their way
Dictators usually go for the government system called “communism”, which is an unrestricted political system: the political theory or system in which all property and wealth is owned in a classless civilization by all the affiliates of that society.
I am happy to live in a democracy because I feel we have the rights and freedom to speak, write, and express views. You can say what you want but doesn’t mean anyone listens to it. Everyone always says this is a free country, but I feel we also have our restrictions as well.
The 20th century brought us some of the world’s most powerful and rich dictatorships. While most followed a straightforward recipe of murder, terror, and genocide, the following managed to plunder the nations they had taken control of in ways that boggle the mind
I have spent a considerable amount of time researching dictators and have come up with an official top 5. Finding estimates on some of these guys is near impossible.
Anyway Enjoy:
5. Idi Amin
Uganda 1971 – 1979
Death Toll – 300,000
Movies based on Idi Amin – The last King of Scotland
Idi Amin was a military leader and President of Uganda from 1971 to 1979. Amin joined the British colonial regiment, the King's African Rifles, in 1946, and eventually held the rank of Major General and Commander of the Ugandan Army prior to taking power in the military coup of January 1971, deposing Milton Obote. He later promoted himself to Field Marshal while he was the head of state.
Two-thirds of the army's 9,000 soldiers were executed by Amin during his first year in power. In total, he killed around 300,000 people.
In 1972, Amin expelled the country's 40,000-80,000 Indians and Pakistanis in the closing months of the year, reportedly after receiving "a message from God" during a dream
During 1975 he staged a publicity stunt for the world media, forcing white residents of Kampala to carry him on a throne then kneel before him and recite an oath of loyalty
Near the end of 1976, Amin officially declared himself "the uncrowned King of Scotland". (despite the fact that the proper name for the title is King of Scots) Amin lavished his guests and dignitaries with Scottish accordion music, while dressed in Scottish kilts.
In January 1979, Nyerere mobilised the Tanzania People's Defence Force and counterattacked, joined by several groups of Ugandan exiles who had united as the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA). Amin's army retreated steadily, and despite military help from Libya's Muammar al-Gaddafi, he was forced to flee into exile by helicopter on 11 April 1979 when Kampala was captured. He escaped first to Libya where he stayed until 1980, and ultimately settled in Saudi Arabia where the Saudi royal family allowed him sanctuary and paid him a generous subsidy in return for his staying out of politics.
4. Slobadan Milosevic
Yugoslavia, 1992-99
Death Toll 400,000
Movies Based on Slobdan Milosevic: None. But there are movies based on the war: Behind the enemy lines and The Hunting Party
Slobodan Milosevic, president of Yugoslavia at that time, wanted to keep all the states under his control, so he went to war with them. However, Milosevic did not fight the clean fight.
When Milosevic was president, he had a plan for a Greater Serbia, which meant a state for Serb people. The Serbs are a distinct ethnic group, with their own language and religion.
As the former Yugoslavia states split apart, Milosevic developed a plan for a Serb-only state that was similar to what Hitler sought to do in Germany.
Slowly, thousands of non-Serbs living in Yugoslavia disappeared. Many were killed, and their bodies later discovered in mass graves throughout Croatia, Bosnia, and Kosovo. Non-Serbs, lucky not to be outright killed, were fired from their jobs and kicked out their homes. Their homes and jobs were given to Serbs.
When Milosevic stepped up his plan to slaughter all the ethnic Albanians living in Kosovo, NATO, an international force led by the United States, launched air strikes to stop him.
In 1999, NATO bombed Yugoslavia for 78 days, destroying roads, bridges and utilities. The bombing stopped after Milosevic backed away from his plan.
In October 2000, the people of Yugoslavia voted Milosevic out of office.
Mr Milosevic faced charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity for his alleged central role in the wars in Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo during the 1990s. He also faced genocide charges over the Bosnia war.
He was found dead in the detention centre at The Hague tribunal
3.Adolf Hitler
Germany - 1934 to 1945
Death Toll: 17 Million
Movies Based on Hitler: The Boys from Brazil. Movies based on World War 2: The Great Escape, Saving Private Ryan and Das Boot
Were it not for the holocaust, Hitler might have been forgiven for the war and remembered as a great general in the same way as Napoleon. He might even have been patted on the head for having a really good go at world domination and given a sticker reading ‘I tried my best.
2.Jozef Stalin
USSR 1932-39
Death Toll: 23 Million
Movie based on Stalin: Red Terror
Stalin oversaw a massive overhaul of the soviet economy, industry and agriculture. The resulting disruption, however, was the cause of mass starvation in the Ukraine. There the situation was so extreme that reports of cannibalism spread. Without a doubt the darkest component of Stalin’s regime, however, was his ‘great purge’ which killed an estimated 700,000 people. The majority of those killed in the purge were ordinary citizens. This attempt to purge the nation of traitors, spies and even potential radicals meant that even uttering the word capitalism could have you sent to the gulag to be worked, starved, beaten or shot to death.
1.Mao Zedong
(China, 1958-61 and 1966-69, Tibet 1949-50)
Death Toll: 49 to 78 Million
His social programs the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution are two of the most ill-fated, poorly named, initiatives ever. The first was an effort to rapidly industrialize China. His focus was on making China a premier exporter of steel, and to this end he asked everybody to make it. The problem was it got many citizens to make smelting shops in their backyards. Not only was the steel of little value, but it was made from everything lying around the house including their own cooking supplies! Without the tools to make food, no money coming in from the steel, and no money to survive ~ a lot of people starved to death. The estimates on this program alone are 20 million deaths!
His policies and political purges from 1949 to 1976 caused the deaths of 49 to 78 million people.
Above guys were sick, but there were many more sick dictators about.
I can keep going on but the list will never stop
Sources
Leopold II of Belgium (Congo, 1886-1908)
Death Toll 8,000,000
Hideki Tojo (Japan, 1941-44)
Death Toll 5,000,000 (civilians in WWII)
Ismail Enver (Turkey, 1915-20)
Death Toll 1,200,000 Armenians (1915) + 350,000 Greek Pontians and 480,000 Anatolian Greeks (1916-22) + 500,000 Assyrians (1915-20)
Pol Pot (Cambodia, 1975-79)
Death Toll 1,700,000
Kim Il Sung (North Korea, 1948-94)
Death Toll 1.6 million (purges and concentration camps)
Menghistu (Ethiopia, 1975-78)
Death Toll 1,500,000
Yakubu Gowon (Biafra, 1967-1970)
Death Toll 1,000,000
Leonid Brezhnev (Afghanistan, 1979-1982)
Death Toll 900,000
Jean Kambanda (Rwanda, 1994)
Death Toll 800,000
Benito Mussolini (Ethiopia, 1936; Libya, 1934-45; Yugoslavia, WWII)
Death Toll 300,000
Saddam Hussein (Iran 1980-1990 and Kurdistan 1987-88)
Death Toll 600,000
Charles Taylor (Liberia, 1989-1996)
Death Toll 220,000
Richard Nixon (Vietnam, 1969-1974)
Death Toll 70,000 (Vietnamese and Cambodian civilians)
Fidel Castro (Cuba, 1959-1999)
Death Toll 30,000
Robert Mugabe (Zimbabwe, 1982-87, Ndebele minority)
Death Toll 20,000
I can keep going on but the list will never stop
Sources
· Charny (1988) Genocide: A Critical Bibliographic Review
· Stephane Courtois: Black Book on Communism (1995)
· Matthews: Guiness 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
http://www.popten.net/2010/05/top-ten-most-evil-dictators-of-all-time-in-order-of-kill-count/
http://akorra.com/2010/03/04/top-10-most-infamous-dictators-in-history/ http://www.popten.net/2010/05/top-ten-most-evil-dictators-of-all-time-in-order-of-kill-count/
http://www.oddee.com/item_90544.aspxand Wikipedia