Regretfully, the nation’s president is not always the Constitution’s defender. We’ve compiled a list of the top ten well-known presidents who are still at large, based on content from dekatop.com.
10. Cuba – Fulgencio Batista

Following the coup in 1952, he served as president from 1940 to 1944 and then again from 1959. People are going on strikes as a result of the opposition’s horrific killing. On January 1, 1959, during the Cuban Revolution, he was deposed, and he vanished in Portugal.
9. Iran – Mohammad Reza Pahlavi

The thirty-fifth and final Shah of Iran at the same time. He was the nation’s ruler from 1941 to 1979. The Islamic revolution of 1979 was ultimately caused by the creation of an authoritarian administration. The Shah fled to Cairo on November 2, 1979. He passed within a year after the expulsion.
8. CAR – Jean-Bedel Bokassa

The president presided over the Central African Empire from 1966 to 1976, while the emperor, or de facto dictator, ruled from 1976 to 1979. France was compelled to remove the monarch from the throne due to a series of events included cannibalism, shootings of schoolchildren protesting against the uniform, brutal torture, and arrests. After making his way to France, he eventually returned to his native country and was found guilty.
7. Philippines – Ferdinand Marcos

served as President between 1965 until 1986. An intolerance for opposition was a sign of the ambition for absolute authority. A military takeover of the nation has resulted from a dubious victory (vote buying, intimidation, and other tactics) in the subsequent elections. Marcos had to make his escape. He passed away in Hawaii three years later following a protracted illness.
6. Haiti – Jean-Claude Duvalier

At the age of 19, he took over his father’s position and became the youngest president in history. Mass protests started in Haiti as a result of Jr. Duvalier’s strategy of intimidation and brutality. Duvalier and his family fled the nation on July 2, 1986, but they were allowed to return in 2011 after pleading with God.
5. Peru – Alberto Fujimori

is most likely among the cruellest emperors. Human rights violations pale in comparison to the “death squads” he established to deal with the undesirable. Following the revelation of his actions during the election campaign, Fujimori fled to Japan.
4. Kyrgyzstan – Askar Akayev

From 1991 to 2005, he presided over Kyrgyzstan as its president. He lost his position in 2005’s “Tulip Revolution,” which was one of the factors that allowed Akaev’s family and group to amass enormous wealth. The next presidential election was rigged, and that was the last straw. On April 5, 2005, he left the nation.
3.Kyrgyzstan – Kurmanbek Bakiyev

He was the nation’s leader from 2005 to 2010. The opposition overthrew him as a result of widespread demonstrations against the misuse of authority. He fled to Belarus on April 15, 2010, and has remained there ever since.
2. Tunisia – Zine El Abidine Ben Ali

From 1987 until 2011, he served as Tunisia’s president. Due to widespread protests sparked by the severe corruption and worsening economic conditions, Ben Ali was forced to leave the nation. He reportedly had 1.5 tonnes of gold in his extremely nice suitcase when he vanished in Saudi Arabia.
1. Ukraine – Viktor Yanukovych – 22.02.2014

The latest example of the president on the run. Following the sniper shooting of demonstrators in Kiev’s so-called Evromaydane, which claimed more than 100 lives, he departed the nation. Like most of his crew, he is currently holed up in Russia.
