Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- What “forgotten” means (and what it doesn’t)
- 1) Orlando Letelier (and Ronni Moffitt), Washington, D.C. (1976)
- 2) Olof Palme, Stockholm (1986)
- 3) Anna Lindh, Stockholm (2003)
- 4) Rafik Hariri, Beirut (2005)
- 5) Anna Politkovskaya, Moscow (2006)
- 6) Hrant Dink, Istanbul (2007)
- 7) Pim Fortuyn, Hilversum (2002)
- 8) Boris Nemtsov, Moscow (2015)
- 9) Daphne Caruana Galizia, Malta (2017)
- 10) Ján Kuciak (and Martina Kušnírová), Slovakia (2018)
- What these cases have in common (and why that matters)
- on lived experiences around assassinations (without glamorizing them)
- Conclusion: remembering is a civic skill
Keyword note: This article discusses political violence and targeted killings for historical and civic context. It does not glorify harm or provide any actionable details.
History has an unfair little algorithm. It boosts the loudest tragedies, the ones with the most replayed footage, the biggest courtroom drama,
the most meme-able villains. Meanwhile, other assassinationsequally consequential, sometimes more revealingslip into the background like old tabs
you swear you’ll read “later.”
This list is about those cases: modern assassinations that shaped elections, shook alliances, exposed corruption, or warned entire professions
(journalists, reformers, dissidents) that the cost of telling the truth could be paid in fullup front.
What “forgotten” means (and what it doesn’t)
“Forgotten” doesn’t mean “unknown” or “unimportant.” It means the story isn’t part of everyday public memoryespecially outside the country where it happened.
In some places, the victims are still mourned every year; in others, their names get reduced to a trivia question, if they survive at all.
To keep this useful (and not just grim), each entry includes: what happened, why it mattered, why it faded, and what the case still teaches us today.
Because if we’re going to look at darkness, we might as well bring a flashlight and a notebook.
1) Orlando Letelier (and Ronni Moffitt), Washington, D.C. (1976)
What happened
Orlando Letelier, a former Chilean diplomat and outspoken critic of Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship, was killed in a car bombing in Washington, D.C.
Ronni Moffitt, his colleague, was also killed; her husband survived. The attack was linked to Chile’s secret police as part of a wider campaign
known as Operation Condor.
Why it mattered
This was a stark message: exile wasn’t immunity. The assassination demonstrated how authoritarian regimes could project violence internationally,
using networks that crossed borders and exploited the assumption that “that kind of thing doesn’t happen here.”
Why it faded
In U.S. memory, the 1970s are crowded with crisis and spectacle. A targeted political assassination on Embassy Row somehow became “a story for foreign policy
nerds,” even though it was literally domestic ground.
What to remember now
When people say political violence is “imported,” remember: sometimes it shows up with a passport stamp and sometimes it shows up with a parking permit.
2) Olof Palme, Stockholm (1986)
What happened
Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme was shot while walking in central Stockholm after a movie, without his usual security detail. The case became one of
Sweden’s most infamous investigations and, for many, a national trauma with no clean ending.
Why it mattered
Palme represented a kind of open-society confidence: leaders moving among the public, politics conducted without fortress-style protection.
His assassination forced Swedenand much of Europeto admit that symbolic openness can collide with real-world threats.
Why it faded
Unsolved cases don’t “wrap.” They just linger. Over time, people stop checking for updates, and uncertainty hardens into background noise.
The tragedy becomes a reference point, not a living story.
What to remember now
When an assassination remains unresolved, the damage is not only the deathit’s the long-term corrosion of trust in institutions tasked with finding truth.
3) Anna Lindh, Stockholm (2003)
What happened
Sweden’s foreign minister, Anna Lindh, was attacked while shopping and later died from her injuries. The killing shocked a country known for relatively
low political violence and leaders who often moved without heavy security.
Why it mattered
Lindh was a prominent voice in European politics. Her death disrupted public life and cast a shadow over Sweden’s political debates, including a major
referendum campaign happening at the time.
Why it faded
Because the case had an identified perpetrator, it “resolved” quickly in the public mind. But the deeper questionhow a society balances openness,
safety, and mental health realitiesdidn’t resolve at all.
What to remember now
Some assassinations don’t just target a person; they target an idea of civic normalcy. The aftershock is cultural: a quieter public square.
4) Rafik Hariri, Beirut (2005)
What happened
Former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri was killed in a massive bombing that also killed others and injured many more. The assassination
triggered enormous political upheaval in Lebanon and intensified regional tensions.
Why it mattered
The killing helped ignite the Cedar Revolution and accelerated major shifts in Lebanon’s internal politics and its relationship with Syria.
Internationally, it became a high-profile test of whether cross-border political violence could be investigated and prosecuted through global mechanisms.
Why it faded
The case became complicated, legalistic, and years-longexactly the kind of slow-burn story that loses oxygen. Many people remember the explosion,
but not the institutional and political ripple effects that followed.
What to remember now
Assassinations can function like “political rerouting.” One death can redirect a country’s path for decades, even when justice feels partial or delayed.
5) Anna Politkovskaya, Moscow (2006)
What happened
Investigative journalist and human rights critic Anna Politkovskaya was killed in Moscow. She was known for reporting on abuses and for fiercely
criticizing those in power.
Why it mattered
Her assassination became a chilling emblem of the risks faced by journalists reporting on conflict and corruption. It also raised global alarms about
impunity: when powerful interests are threatened, accountability can become optional.
Why it faded
Because it blended into a broader pattern. When there are many attacks on critics, each individual story struggles to remain distinct in the public mind
even when the person was extraordinary.
What to remember now
The press doesn’t just need freedom in theory. It needs safety in practice. A society can’t “inform itself” if truth-tellers are treated as disposable.
6) Hrant Dink, Istanbul (2007)
What happened
Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist and editor known for advocating reconciliation and minority rights, was killed outside his newspaper’s office.
His death sparked major public grief and protest.
Why it mattered
Dink’s assassination revealed how nationalism, hate, and legal pressure can combine into a dangerous ecosystemwhere social targeting and official
hostility blur together.
Why it faded
International attention moved on, as it often does. But for communities at the center of the story, “moving on” isn’t a setting you can toggle.
What to remember now
When public debate treats minorities as a problem to be managed, violence can show up as the “solution” offered by extremists. That slope is not slippery;
it’s greased.
7) Pim Fortuyn, Hilversum (2002)
What happened
Dutch politician Pim Fortuyn was killed shortly before national elections, sending shockwaves through the Netherlands and reshaping political debate.
Why it mattered
The assassination intensified polarization around immigration, identity, and political speech. It also demonstrated how a single act of violence can
supercharge a movement, turning a campaign into a cultural rupture.
Why it faded
Outside Europe, many people remember the broader rise of populism but not the catalytic moments that accelerated it. The story becomes a footnote in a
bigger narrative.
What to remember now
Political violence doesn’t “end debate.” It distorts debateby making fear the loudest participant in the room.
8) Boris Nemtsov, Moscow (2015)
What happened
Russian opposition politician Boris Nemtsov was killed near the Kremlin after years of criticizing the government and organizing against corruption
and war-related policies.
Why it mattered
The killing signaled the vulnerability of high-profile dissent even in the most symbolically “watched” locations. It also strengthened international
concerns about political repression and the shrinking space for opposition.
Why it faded
Global attention shifted rapidly to other crises. Meanwhile, the story became absorbed into a larger conversation about Russiaimportant, yes, but
often so broad that individual lives disappear inside the headline.
What to remember now
When dissent is punished publicly, the real target is often the audience: “Let this be a lesson.” That lesson spreads quietly, through self-censorship.
9) Daphne Caruana Galizia, Malta (2017)
What happened
Maltese investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia was killed by a car bomb after reporting on corruption and powerful networks.
Her death prompted public outrage and intense scrutiny of governance and accountability in Malta.
Why it mattered
The assassination underlined that even within the European Union, journalists could be targeted in extreme ways. It also raised hard questions about
institutions: when the watchdog is attacked, who guards the guardrails?
Why it faded
The case involved lengthy investigations, court proceedings, and political falloutvital, but hard to follow. Many international readers remember the
initial horror and then lose the thread.
What to remember now
Corruption thrives on complexity. If a system is so tangled nobody can explain it, accountability becomes a rumor instead of a process.
10) Ján Kuciak (and Martina Kušnírová), Slovakia (2018)
What happened
Slovak investigative journalist Ján Kuciak and his fiancée Martina Kušnírová were killed in a case that shook Slovakia and drew international focus
to corruption and organized crime links.
Why it mattered
Their deaths became a catalyst for major protests and political consequences. The story also highlighted the role of investigative work in exposing
hidden networkssometimes at enormous personal risk.
Why it faded
The legal story became complicated and stretched over years, with reversals, appeals, and partial outcomes. Long proceedings are essential for justice,
but terrible for attention spans.
What to remember now
When journalists are attacked, the victim is not only the personit’s the public’s right to know what’s being done in its name (and with its money).
What these cases have in common (and why that matters)
Ten different countries, ten different contextsyet the patterns rhyme. Not perfectly, but enough to make you put down your coffee and stare into the middle
distance for a second.
- Attention is fragile. Fast outrage fades; slow justice doesn’t trend.
- Security is symbolic until it isn’t. Open societies often learn the hard way that “normal” can be exploited.
- Impunity is contagious. When one major case feels unresolved, future attackers may read that as permission.
- Targeted killings are message crimes. They broadcast warnings to entire professions and movements.
- Complexity is a shield. The more tangled the story becomes, the easier it is for the public to disengage.
on lived experiences around assassinations (without glamorizing them)
If you’ve never lived through a political assassination as a member of the public, the experience can be hard to imaginebecause it’s less like a single
event and more like a crack that spreads through daily life. People often describe the first hours as surreal: a headline that doesn’t fit the ordinary
shape of the day. The language is oddly bland (“killed,” “attack,” “suspect in custody”), while everyone’s nervous system is screaming,
This is not normal.
In the days that follow, there’s usually a strange mix of unity and suspicion. Candlelight vigils and memorial flowers appeargentle rituals that say,
“We’re still human.” At the same time, rumors proliferate. Friends argue, families split into chat-group factions, and every coincidence gets upgraded into
a theory. That’s not because people are irrational; it’s because uncertainty hurts. A conspiracy can feel emotionally easier than randomness or institutional failure.
Journalists and investigators often experience something different: a tightening of the world. Sources go quiet. Ordinary meetings start feeling risky.
Colleagues trade safety tips in the same casual tone people use to discuss weekend plans, which is its own kind of heartbreak. In places where assassinations
happen more than once, a grim professional instinct can set in: the story is no longer “Who died?” but “Who’s next?” That question changes what gets reported,
how it’s phrased, and whether it gets published at all.
For citizens, one of the most common experiences is the shrinking of public space. Leaders add security, events get gated, protests get policed more heavily,
and the public learns that being present can be treated as a risk factor. Even when those measures are understandable, they can quietly train people to stay home.
The assassination succeeds twice: once in the killing, and again when it persuades a society to lower its voice.
And then there’s the long tail: anniversaries that reopen grief; court hearings that feel technical and distant; the slow realization that memory requires effort.
Many communities develop a kind of civic muscle memorynaming scholarships after victims, creating investigative funds, building memorials, teaching the story in schools.
Those actions are not about reliving tragedy. They’re about refusing the final victory that assassins want: erasure.
The healthiest response isn’t obsession, and it isn’t avoidance. It’s sustained attention with boundaries: supporting accountable institutions, protecting independent
journalism, resisting dehumanizing rhetoric, and remembering that democracy isn’t only votingit’s also defending the conditions that make truth possible.
Conclusion: remembering is a civic skill
“Forgotten modern assassinations” are not just sad stories you missed. They’re warnings that didn’t stay on the front page long enough.
If the goal of an assassination is to silence one person and intimidate everyone else, then memory is a form of resistancequiet, persistent, and stubbornly public.
