Mauno Olavi Laiho | |
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Born | 1907 |
Died | 2 September 1944 Oulu |
Cause | Execution by firing squad |
Conviction(s) | Desertion, espionage and high treason |
Penalty | Death |
Mauno Olavi Laiho (1907 - 2 September 1944) was the last Finn to be executed in Finland.[1]
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Olavi Laiho was born as a son of a farmhand in Halikko, Finland. He was introduced to Communism very early on, and was an active member of the underground Finnish Communist Party. He moved to Turku, where he worked as construction worker. Laiho was active in sports.
During the Continuation War, Laiho was conscripted in the Finnish Army as a Private. Laiho deserted and moved in a clandestine hideaway near Turku, where he worked actively as a spy for the Soviet Union and as an aide for other deserters.
Laiho was caught in early 1944 and sentenced to death by military court for desertion, espionage and high treason. He was shot by military police firing squad 2 September 1944 in Oulu, two days before the armistice.[2] It is likely his Communist background influenced on his sentence.
Laiho was the last Finn to be executed in Finland, and the last Finn to be executed for a military crime. A group of three Soviet infiltrators were shot on the following day for espionage. The armistice on 4 September 1944 put any further executions on hiatus. In 1945, all death sentences were commuted to life imprisonment.
Death penalty from military crimes was abolished in Finland 1972.