For their politics, they were put in prison. Some died, some were released, and some are still there. But when others looked out from the same prison bars and saw mud, they saw stars. From a Korean dissident to a nuclear scientist, via Vaclav Havel, we look at some of the world’s most famous political prisoners.

Kidnapped from a hotel room in Tokyo by members of KICA, General Park’s notorious spy agency in 1973, Kim Dae-Jung was brought to his Seoul residence, only to be placed under house arrest. Through his decades long struggle for democracy and human rights in his homeland, Kim saw his country swap one dictator for another, until the great liberator, financial crisis, brought him to power. The years of exile in America had secured him many admirers, and he tried to use that leverage to bring about that same fate for his brothers in the north, but not even an embrace from Kim Jong Il at Pyongyang prevented him from being voted out.

No one person could inspire such conflicting feelings like Mohammed Abdel Rahman Abdel Raouf Arafat al-Qudwa al-Husseini. To some, he exemplified resistance, a man who turned a fledgling, rag-tag movement into a world renowned organisation, with sole responsibility for the Palestinians. To others, he was a vile terrorist with little respect for human rights. Towards the very end, though, his inability to make peace jeopardized his credibility as a statesman and the Israeli government besieged his home in Ramallah. It was from there that the gallant leader, once the face of a dispossessed people, still defiant, led his people . He was allowed to go to Paris for medical treatment, but he returned home only to be buried.

A modern day cross between the zeal and idealism of Che Guevara and the courage and integrity of Nelson Mandela, Xanana Gusmao spearheaded East Timor’s independence movement from Portugal, and later from Indonesia. Arrested in November, 1992, on charges of subversion and illegal possession of firearms, Gusmao began on a journey to free his people from Indonesian occupation. Superbly aided by Jose Ramos Horta, Gusmao was able to bring the plight of his people to worldwide attention. No amount of torture and intimidation could break the man, and he came out stronger than ever. His release, in 1999, was the precedent to a referendum and, eventually, to independence.

For a man of such rigorous discipline, Mordechai Vanunu was trapped by the most elementary of methods. The trial was a clandestine affair and, not surprisingly, landed him in prison for eighteen years, eleven of which were spent in solitary confinement. His release has not brought about much relief, and a broad array of restrictions are imposed on his speech and movement. What did he do? He exposed Israel’s nuclear program.

“If you want to see your plays performed the way you wrote them, become president” said Vaclav Havel. If anybody would know, it would be him. Vaclav Havel transitioned from a writer of plays to the writer of his country’s destiny. When the Prague Spring ushered in Czechoslovakia’s winter of discontent, Havel scripted the Charter 77 manifesto, co-founded the Committee for the Defense of the Unjustly Persecuted and endured imprisonment with fellow artists. It is from prison- ‘the great school of self control’ – that the man demonstrated the potential of artists to shape the collective consciousness of a people, and thus alter the direction of a country for posterity.

‘Yeravda’ was the reply given by Mahatma Gandhi when asked about his address by a British interrogator. He wasn’t misinformed. In fact, India’s independence struggle was forged from the prison walls by the political mastermind, whose ideals of non violent civil disobedience brought about the end of British imperialism. Gandhi was unfazed by mortar, brick and stone. He successfully transformed the prison from a place of derision to a center of festive reunion, never flinching to return to captivity.

Invasion of the British consulate in Ghent. Balloons filled with tomato sauce hurled at the queen. Condolences from Tehran and Delhi. Just some of the many reactions observed when a twenty seven year old Irishman died of a hunger fast after sixty six days in Long Kesh. The whole objective of the fast was to get political prisoner status. Margret Thatcher thought otherwise, branding the IRA sympathizer as a rabble-rouser, and Bobby went to his grave smiling.

History will be kind to Andrei Sakharov. Indeed, he had the advantage of scripting it as the father of the Soviet H-bomb, dissident and a political prisoner. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, a man who knew a thing or two about the prison system in the Soviet union, wrote that a “miracle occurred when Andrei Sakharov emerged in the Soviet state, among the swarms of corrupt, venal, unprincipled intelligentsia.” Growing increasingly disillusioned with the incompatibility of the state mechanism, with the principles of individual liberty and human understanding, Sakharov made his ideas known to the world.’Our country, like every modern state, needs profound democratic reforms.’ he said, ‘It needs political and ideological pluralism, a mixed economy and protection of human rights and the opening up of society.’ The party exiled him to that obscure city of Gorky, but his legend only aggravated, culminating in his release in 1986. By then, Andrei Dmitrievich Sakharov had paved the way for the democratization of the Soviet Union by simply refusing to yield.

If success is a journey and not a destination, then Suu Kyi is a living embodiment of accomplishment. Because, through her two decade long struggle to bring democracy to Burma, she has maintained that the quintessential revolution is that of the spirit. Branded as a ‘terrorist’ by the junta and placed under house arrest since 1990, the leader of the National League for Democracy has handled her ordeal with extraordinary grace and dignity. At the age of sixty four, her zeal has not diminished, and her people march to that elusive quest of freedom and democracy.

‘Bring Back Nelson Mandela, Bring him back home to Soweto, I want to see him walking hand in hand with Winnie Mandela’, sang Hugh Masekela, a renowned anti-apartheid artist. Tried and convicted in the Rivonia trial for sabotage against the apartheid government, the black nationalist leader was deemed too dangerous to walk the streets of South Africa for twenty seven years, his demand for a non racial South Africa too much to bear. Masekela got his wish on the 11th of February, 1990. Mandela emerged from Victor-verster prison, a face until then unrecognizable to most South Africans, to a warm welcome from the teeming multitude who had come to catch a glimpse of their messiah. He then addressed a crowd at Cape Town by raising his arm and clenching his fist-the power salute which the world is now so accustomed to-and cried ‘Amandla, Amandla.’ The Jordan it seemed, had been crossed.












Why didn't Sakharov say anything about the mafia Oligarchs like Berezovsky who is here in Britain who attempted and nearly destroyed Russia who got there wealth through murder, bribery, extortion and terrorism?
Was he really concerned about democracy and other things or was it about something else like the shift in domestic and foreign policy in the USSR in the late 60's.
Pretty good list I thought you were going pout some retard choices on it.
Decypha, why is everyone not attacking you for saying exactly what I have.? Bit weird, isn't it? Any way, your contribution delivers facts that are true. Whoever wishes to ignore it, merely distances themselves from reality and history.
The bottom line is that there is no room for Nazis,or Racists of any colour or persuasion in South Africa. The same applies to so-called democrats who hanker after the old dispensation, its draconian laws, and the endless human suffering that flowed from it.
Why should any sane person have a problem with that? That is my point of departure. Does anyone have a problem with such a simple opinion.
how about Ninoy Aquino? better than sands.
i did mention him above.
Bluesman, Martyn Abrahams and a few others seem to attack people just because they disagree. Since when is it not possible to agree to disagree without being insulted? Kerahdah posted his information because Valois asked him about his contribution, not because he just wanted to. Don’t these people even read before they post? It seems as if you’re damned if you do, AND damned if you do. What do these people want? Maybe they attack Kerahdah because he is an achiever despite the history and the politics of the country, and they are not. Jealousy makes people go into attack mode
I have just read quite a few comments on the inclusion of Bobby Sands, most I have to say are very negative.
But I do suspect that these unfavorable comments are from people who have no first hand knowledge of what Bobby Sands and his comrades stood for and indeed died for. Their knowledge of this period would no doubt be gleaned from the BBC.
Consider this, if the Germans were successful in WW2, and in a settlement kept the bottom 6 counties of England, would there be opposition?
Bobby Sands would not have been in prison only for the British occupation of 6 of Irelands 32 counties.
A country divided will never be at peace.
Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino of the Philippines
For those questioning the inclusion of Bobby Sands who I suspect are mostly British, he was an I.R.A, prisoner who actually stood for election in a British parliamenary election while incarcerated in Long Kesh to gain political status for fellow republican prisoners, he won over 30,000 votes (more than Margaret Thatcher received) and was duely elected, you can't get much more political than that.
God Bless the Hungerstrikers.
A good idea for a list but I felt it was badly executed – which is, in my opinion, what should've happened to Bobby Sands and Yasser Arafat…
eh eh eh lol!
For all those who bash Bobby Sands and call him a terrorist, I think you should know that he was arrested for possession of a firearm, not for murdering anyone. All you who condemn him, how can you be his judge? In a country where Catholics were treated as second class citizens, interned without trial, and killed with no jusitification, e.g. Bloody Sunday, how can you not expect people to stand up against a British rule which oppressed half of Northern Ireland? Had the political situation been different in Northern Ireland, Sands would not have been arrested, so he is a political prisoner. Terrorism is wrong, but so is oppression and tyranny.
i just came across this list and before i read it i already knew that Nelson Mandela was going to be number one. didnt take much to guess that. i was happy for see that he actually was and that people's perception of my country were changing. Then, i read these comments and i must say that i was taken back by the absolute negativity by people who have never even been here. Its sickening actually, how you can judge someone or something without even knowing anything about them/it. Yes we, South Africa, have problems such is with every other place in the world! Not just as a South African but as a human being I’m too afraid to travel else where in the world because of crime!! I would rather stay home, I FEEL SAFER AT HOME, IN SOUTH AFRICA, than I have felt anywhere I have travelled! And that is saying something! I have travelled through Africa & realised that this is my home, absolutely nothing happened to me on those trips but then i have been robbed in New York, I HAD TO LEAVE AFRICA TO GET MUGGED!! AT GUN POINT NOGAL!! Yet i am not negative about the place or the people. i still always find something good to say regardless of the misfortunes & hostility i found whilst i was there. Although i will not speak as highly of other places as i speak of my time in Kenya or Tanzania or Malwi or Egypt etc. but I still find time to say something good. If the world cup was not enough to change people's perceptions about us then when will it ever change? I don’t talk about apartheid with people who know only what they have read about it. After experiencing apartheid first hand and I’m still not bitter, but it does hurt when people who have not even been here cant stand us & this whilst we are actively trying to move forward. Judging a country but its politicians is really a warped way or observing the world. Find it within yourself not to be a better person, because therein lies the understanding the rest of the world is not so bad. I love Africa its my home, and I will do everything in my power to make it better. As one person I may not make an huge impact but at least it’s something and i will continue to do so. what can you say you have done to make your home better? Think before you speak.
How can you think of saying, 'Friend, let me help you get rid of that speck in your eye,' when you can't see past the log in your own eye? Hypocrite! First get rid of the log in your own eye; then you will see well enough to deal with the speck in your friend's eye.
What about Leonard Peltier? The guy founds the American Indian Movement starts trouble for the government then suddenly kills a state trooper when he's perfectly content using the law to do his fighting for years previous? Also has the shadiest trial in modern history.
What about Mumia Abu Jamal? Another guy rail roaded.
The IRA did say sorry for wat they did in 2005 when they ended the armed campagin. Bobby sands died for the better treatment of his fellow prisionors and to further the republican cause. The IRA fought for the right to land that is irish land and who are the british to tells us what land is ours maybe the radical arabs might attack you if you stopped interfering with everyone lese business . Up sinn fein Tiocfaidh ar la and up the ra
Aung San Suu Kyi? Don't make me laugh! That womans father fought a war against the British in Burma and once he had kicked the British out he had her educated in Enlgland, what a hypocrite!
I don’t see any hypocrisy there. But even if there were, it wouldn’t be hers, surely.
Anwar Ibrahim from Malaysia is a victim of gov conspiracy. he been prisoned and sacked from the gov when he was the deputy prime minister
wonderful photograph
Very good list. The name I would add is Leonard Peltier. He has been a prisoner of the United States Federal since the siege at Wounded Knee in 1973. A lot of people from all over the world have pleaded for his release, even the Queen of England. He was accused of murdering two federal agents, but it was later discovered that he was nowhere near the area where the agents were killed. Do more research on Leonard Peltier, and you will see the great injustice done to this man.
On another note, related to Wounded Knee, ask yourselves “Who really killed Anna Mae Aquash?”
I always think Nelson Mendela is Morgan Freeman at first glance
Leonard Peltier- Nuff Said
Aung San Suu Kyi deserves first place, she never resorted to violence like Mandela in order to achieve her aims.
I am very impressed with them, what they stand solely for the benefit of others who are oppressed. They struggle for humanity .. Aung San Suu Kyi, i love you.
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