List of people assassinated in Africa
This is an incomplete list of people who have been assassinated, or murdered in Africa.
Assassinations in Africa
Algeria
- 117 BC – Hiempsal, co-ruler of Numidia
- 1942 – François Darlan, senior figure of Vichy France
- 1957 – Maurice Audin, communist mathematician
- 1963 – Mohamed Khemisti, Algerian foreign minister
- 1987 – Mustafa Bouyali, Islamic fundamentalist
- 1992 – Mohamed Boudiaf, President of Algeria
- 1993 – Youcef Sebti, poet
- 1993 – Kasdi Merbah, former Prime Minister of Algeria
- 1994 – Abdelkader Alloula, playwright
- 1994 – Cheb Hasni, singer
- 1998 – Lounès Matoub, singer
- 1999 – Abdelkader Hachani, Islamic fundamentalist
Burkina Faso
- 1987 – Thomas Sankara, Head of State of Burkina Faso
- 1991 – Clément Oumarou Ouédraogo, opposition
Burundi
Cameroon
Chad
Comoros
Congo (Brazzaville)
Congo (Kinshasa)
- 1961 – Patrice Lumumba, former Prime Minister of the Congo
- 1961 – Maurice Mpolo, Lumumba associate
- 1961 – Joseph Okito, Lumumba associate
- 2001 – Laurent Kabila, President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Côte d'Ivoire / Ivory Coast
Egypt
- Pompey the Great, (48 BC), Roman politician killed in Egypt
- Germanicus, (19), Roman military leader, poisoned in Alexandria by Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso under orders from Tiberius
- Al-Afdal Shahanshah, (1121), vizier of Fatimid Egypt
- Al-Amir, (1130), last Fatimid Caliph
- Qutuz, (1260), Mamluk sultan of Egypt
- Khalil, (1293), Mamluk sultan of Egypt
- Jean Baptiste Kléber, (1800) French general, in Cairo.
- Boutros Ghali, (1910), Prime Minister of Egypt, by Ibrahim El-Wardan
- Sir Lee Stack, (1924), governor-general of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, in Cairo
- Walter Edward Guinness, Lord Moyne, (1944), the UK's Minister Resident in the Middle East; killed in Cairo by the Stern Gang
- Ahmed Maher Pasha, (1945), Prime Minister of Egypt, in Cairo by Mahmud Issawy
- Mahmud Fahmi Nokrashi, (1948), Prime Minister of Egypt, by a member of the Muslim Brotherhood
- Hassan al-Banna, (1949), founder of the Muslim Brotherhood
- Anwar Sadat, (1981), President of Egypt
- Rifaat al-Mahgoub, (1990), speaker of Egyptian parliament
- Farag Foda, (1992), Egyptian politician and intellectual
Equatorial Guinea
Ethiopia
- Tilahun Gizaw, (1969), Ethiopian student leader
The Gambia
Guinea
Abudusalam Eduardo 2009
Kenya
- Pio Gama Pinto, (1965), socialist politician
- Tom Mboya, (1969), Kenyan politician
- Josiah Kariuki, (1975), Kenyan politician
- Lawrence Otieno Muga (1987), politician & teacher in Kasipul Kabondo
- Robert Ouko, (1990), foreign minister of Kenya
- John Kaiser, (2000), missionary (officially recorded as a suicide)
- Starlin Arush, (2002), Somali Peace Activist and INGO Worker
- Odhiambo Mbadi,(2005) Kenyan Constitution Review Commissioner
Liberia
Madagascar
Mozambique
Niger
Nigeria
- Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, (1966), Prime Minister of Nigeria killed during military coup
- Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello, (1966)
- Adekunle Fajuyi, (1966)
- Samuel Akintola, (1966)
- Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi, (1966), military head of state
- Murtala Ramat Mohammed, (1976), President of Nigeria
- Dele Giwa, (1986), journalist
- Ken Saro-Wiwa, (1995), activist
- Bola Ige, (2001), justice minister of Nigeria
- Sir Chief Dr Samuel Anenih, (2008), Former Minister of Finance of Nigeria
Rwanda
Somalia
South Africa
- Shaka, (1828), king of the Zulus, near Stanger (now KwaDukuza) by his brothers Dingane and Umthlangana, with the help of Mbopa
- Umthlangana, (1828), Zulu prince, stabbed to death by Dingane shortly after Shaka's assassination
- Dingane, (1840), king of the Zulus, stabbed to death while on a military expedition in the Hlatikhulu Forest by Zulu Nyawo, Sambane and Nondawana
- Hendrik Verwoerd, (1966), Prime Minister of South Africa, stabbed in parliament by Dimitri Tsafendas
- Onkgopotse Tiro, (1974), South African student leader
- Steve Biko, (1974), South African anti-apartheid activist, killed in police custody
- Ruth First, (1982), anti-apartheid scholar and wife of Communist party leader Joe Slovo, by pro-apartheid master spy and security policeman Craig Williamson
- Vernon Nkadimeng, (1985), South African dissident
- Dulcie September, (1988), head of the African National Congress in Paris
- David Webster, (1989), Social anthropologist and anti-Apartheid activist
- Chris Hani, (1993), leader of the South African Communist Party
- Johan Heyns, (1994), prominent leader in the Dutch Reformed Church
Sudan
Tanzania
Togo
Tunisia
- Khalil Wazir ("Abu Jihad"), (1988), military leader of the PLO, in Tunis
- Salah Khalaf ("Abu Iyad"), (1991), deputy leader of the PLO killed by Abu Nidal terrorists in Tunis, Tunisia
Uganda
Zambia
Zimbabwe
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