User:David Kernow/List of dictators (test format)

¡== Africa ==

Name Country Years
in power
Summary
Gamal Abel Nasser Egypt 1954-1970 coup 1954, self-appointment 1956, only-candidate elections from 1956
Kwame Nkrumah Ghana 1957-1966 self-appointment, opposition banned, detention (all from 1964) [1] [2]
Ahmed Sékou Touré Guinea 1958-1984 killings [3] [4], widely described as dictator [5] [6]
David Dacko Central African Republic 1960-1966
1979-1981
coup 1979, opposition banned [7]
François Tombalbaye Chad 1960-1975 unelected, detention
Félix Houphouët-Boigny Côte d'Ivoire 1960-1993 opposition banned until 1990
Modibo Keita Mali 19601968 established militia and extra-legal governing body
Milton Obote Uganda 1962-1972
1980-1985
self-appointment and constitution suspended 1966
Hastings Kamuzu Banda Malawi 1963-1994 opposition banned 1966, self-appointment 1971, killings
Mobutu Sese Seko Zaïre 1965-1997 kleptocrat, personality cult, opposition banned until 1990
Jean-Bédel Bokassa Central African Republic 1966-1979 coup 1966, abolished constitution, self-appointment 1976 [8]
Gnassingbé Eyadéma Togo 1967-2005 coup 1967, no elections until 1998, personality cult, banned opposition, torture, killings [9]
Omar Bongo Gabon 1967 to date one-party state from 1968, no elections until 1990, accusations of nepotism
Moussa Traoré Mali 1968-1991 coup 1968, opposition banned, one-party state from 1979
Francisco Nguema Equatorial Guinea 1968-1979 self-appointment 1972, personality cult, killings
Muammar al-Qaddafi Libya 1969 to date coup 1969
Gaafar Nimeiry Sudan 1969-1985 coup 1969, opposition banned, laws imposed (Sharia)
Maxamed Siyaad Barre Somalia 1969-1991 coup 1969, personality cult
Anwar Sadat Egypt 1970-1981 unelected, suppressed opposition ("The Corrective Revolution")
Idi Amin Uganda 1971-1979 self-appointment 1976, expulsions, killings
Juvénal Habyarimana Rwanda 1973-1994 coup 1973, unelected
Mengistu Haile Mariam Ethiopia 1974-1991 one-party state, opposition repressed, killings
Jean-Baptiste Bagaza Burundi 1976-1987 widely described as dictator [10] [11]
Albert René Seychelles 1977-2004 one-party state, established compulsory education involving political indoctrination and paramilitary training
Daniel arap Moi Kenya 1978-2002 established de jure one-party state, repression, torture, detention
Teodoro Mbasogo Equatorial Guinea 1979 to date coup 1979, opposition effectively banned
José Eduardo dos Santos Angola 1979 to date one-party state, no elections until 1992 [12]
Samuel K. Doe Liberia 1980-1990 coup 1980, probable kleptocrat [13]
Hosni Mubarak Egypt 1981 to date unelected until 2005
André Kolingba Central African Republic 1981-1993 coup 1981, opposition persecuted, lost free election 1993, attempted coup 2001
Hissène Habré Chad 1982-1990 coup 1982, opposition leaders executed
Omar Hasan Ahmad al-Bashir Sudan 1989 to date coup 1989, implicated in Darfur conflict
Zine El Abidine Ben Ali Tunisia 1987 to date politics repressed, censorship
Idriss Déby Chad 1990 to date coup 1990, opposition and press suppressed [14]
Sani Abacha Nigeria 1993-1998 coup 1993, opposition persecuted, detention
Laurent-Désiré Kabila Congo-Kinshasa 1997-2001 coup 1997, no elections held during interstate First and Second Congo Wars
Charles Taylor Liberia 1997-2003 elected but widely described as dictator [15] [16] [17], implicated in conflict diamond and illegal arms trading
François Bozizé Central African Republic 2003 to date coup 2003, constitution suspended [18]
Ely Ould Mohamed Vall Mauritania 2005 to date coup 2005