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Political cleansing of population
Eliminating groups of people for political reasons
Eliminating groups of people for political reasons
Political cleansing of a population is the elimination of categories of people in specific areas for political reasons. The means of it may vary and they may include acts of political violence, ethnic cleansing, forced migration, genocide political repression, purges, population transfers and terrorism (especially state terrorism and state-sponsored terrorism). Political cleansing has been used by many dictatorships.
Genocide Convention
Under the Genocide Convention, political groups are not a protected group if they are targeted with an intent to destroy the political group even if they share an ethnic, national or religious identity.
Raphael Lemkin personally insisted against the inclusion of political groups in the Convention. Lemkin wrote in his autobiography: "We in Latin America make revolutions from time to time, which involves the destruction of political opponents. Then we reconcile and live in peace. Later the group in power is thrown out in another revolution. Why should this be classified as the crime of genocide?"
Protection of political groups was eliminated from the United Nations resolution after a second vote because many states, including Stalin's Soviet Union, anticipated that clause to apply unneeded limitations to their right to suppress internal disturbances. The reason given was that the protected groups were immutable, which scholars point out is unlikely, since religious and national affiliation are not immutable.
Efforts to have political groups added to the Convention have been unsuccessful.
Scholarly study of genocide usually acknowledges the United Nations omission of economic and political groups, and uses mass political killing datasets of democide, and genocide and politicide, or geno-politicide. Killings by the Khmer Rouge in Democratic Kampuchea have been labelled genocide or autogenocide, and the deaths under Leninism and Stalinism in the Soviet Union, and Maoism in Communist China have been controversially investigated as possible cases; the Soviet famine of 1932–1933 and the Great Chinese Famine during the Great Leap Forward have been controversially "depicted as instances of mass killing underpinned by genocidal intent". In addition to those, also the massacres of Indonesian communists, that caused between 500,000 and 3 million deaths, are considered, controversially, by many as a genocide.
Politicide
Politicide is the deliberate physical destruction or elimination of a group whose members oppose a regime or share the main characteristic of belonging to a political movement. It is a type of political repression and one of the means used to politically cleanse populations, another being forced migration. It may be compared to genocide or ethnic cleansing, both of which involve the killing of people based on their membership in a particular racial or ethnic group rather than their adherence to a particular ideology.
Politicide is used to describe the killing of groups that are not covered by the Genocide Convention. Social scientists Ted Robert Gurr and Barbara Harff use politicide to describe the killing of groups of people who are targeted not because of their shared ethnic or communal traits, but because of "their hierarchical position or political opposition to the regime and dominant groups."Harff, Barbara, and Ted Robert Gurr. “Toward Empirical Theory of Genocides and Politicides: Identification and Measurement of Cases Since 1945.” International Studies Quarterly, vol. 32, no. 3, 1988, pp. 359–71. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/2600447. Accessed 29 Jan. 2025. Harff studies genocide and politicide, sometimes shortened as geno-politicide, in order to include the killing of political, economic, ethnic and cultural groups. Manus Midlarsky uses politicide to describe an arc of large-scale killing from the western parts of the Soviet Union to China and Cambodia. In his book The Killing Trap: Genocide in the Twentieth Century, Midlarsky raises similarities between the killings perpetrated by Joseph Stalin and Pol Pot.
Motives
Some groups attempt to eliminate the base of support for political opponents such as insurgents. This happens in many countries with high levels of insurgency such as Colombia. It may be a means for and referred to as pacification.
References
References
- "About the genocide convention".
- Strandberg Hassellind, Filip. (2020). "Groups Defined by Gender and the Genocide Convention". Genocide Studies and Prevention.
- Bachman, Jeffrey S.. (2022-09-16). "The Politics of Genocide: From the Genocide Convention to the Responsibility to Protect". Rutgers University Press.
- Bazyler, Michael J.. (2017). "Holocaust, Genocide, and the Law: A Quest for Justice in a Post-Holocaust World". Oxford University Press.
- 978-0-415-48619-4. According to Jones: "Also unsurprisingly, it was the settler-colonial regimes who were most anxious to exclude cultural genocide from the Genocide Convention, as Raphael Lemkin’s biographer John Cooper points out." pp. 102.
- Schaack, Beth (1997). "The Crime of Political Genocide: Repairing the Genocide Convention's Blind Spot". ''The Yale Law Journal''. '''106''' (7): 2259–2291. {{doi. 10.2307/797169. {{JSTOR. 797169.{{ISSN. 0044-0094
- Staub, Ervin (June 2000). "Genocide and Mass Killing: Origins, Prevention, Healing and Reconciliation". ''Political Psychology''. '''21''' (2): 367–382. {{doi. 10.1111/0162-895X.00193. {{JSTOR. 3791796.{{ISSN. 1467-9221
- Brown, Bartram S.. (2011). "Research Handbook on International Criminal Law". Edward Elgar Publishing.
- Atsushi, Tago; Wayman, Frank W. (January 2010). "Explaining the Onset of Mass Killing, 1949–87". ''Journal of Peace Research Online''. Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications. '''47''' (1): 3–13. {{doi. 10.1177/0022343309342944. {{JSTOR. 25654524. {{S2CID. 145155872.
- link. (20 November 2020 . London: Taylor & Francis. p. 321. {{isbn). 978-0-415-42561-2.
- https://www.oed.com/dictionary/politicide_n
- Harff, Barbara; Gurr, Ted Robert (September 1988). "Toward Empirical Theory of Genocides and Politicides: Identification and Measurement of Cases since 1945". ''International Studies Quarterly''. Wiley on behalf of The International Studies Association. '''32''' (3): 359–371. {{doi. 10.2307/2600447. {{JSTOR. 2600447. {{ISSN. 0020-8833.
- Wayman, Frank W.; Tago, Atsushi (January 2010). "Explaining the Onset of Mass killing, 1949–87". ''Journal of Peace Research Online''. Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications. '''47''' (1): 3–13. {{doi. 10.1177/0022343309342944. {{JSTOR. 25654524. {{S2CID. 145155872. {{ISSN. 0022-3433. "The two important scholars who have created datasets related to this are Rummel (1995) and Harff (2003). Harff (sometimes with Gurr) has studied what she terms 'genocide and politicide', defined to be genocide by killing as understood by the Genocide Convention plus the killing of a political or economic group (Harff & Gurr, 1988); the combined list of genocides is sometimes labeled 'geno-politicide' for short. Rummel (1994, 1995) has a very similar concept, 'democide', which includes such genocide and geno-politicide done by the government forces, plus other killing by government forces, such as random killing not targeted at a particular group. As Rummel (1995: 3-4) says, 'Cold-blooded government killing ... extends beyond genocide'; For example, 'shooting political opponents; or murdering by quota'. Hence, 'to cover all such murder as well as genocide and politicide, I use the concept democide. This is the intentional killing of people by government' (Rummel, 1995: 4). So Rummel has a broader concept than geno-politicide, but one that seems to include geno-politicide as a proper subset." Quote at p. 4.
- link. (30 July 2023 . New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 22, 309–310. {{isbn). 978-0-521-81545-1.
- link. (30 July 2023 . New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 321. {{isbn). 978-0-521-81545-1.
- Otis, John. (17 October 1999). "'Political cleansing' in Colombia rising". colombiasupport.net.
- (2003). "Irregular Armed Forces and their Role in Politics and State Formation". Cambridge University Press.
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