1989 Ranking
    1. Ethiopia 24,358.00
    2. Afghanistan 5,174.00
    3. El Salvador 4,924.00
    4. Sudan 4,515.00
    5. Angola 2,810.00
    6. Peru 1,827.00
    7. Mozambique 1,149.00
    8. Uganda 1,022.00
    9. India 1,002.00
    10. Burma (Myanmar) 997.00
    11. Philippines 937.00
    12. Panama 920.00
    13. Cambodia 814.00
    14. Lebanon 760.00
    15. Sri Lanka 533.00
    16. Nicaragua 526.00
    17. Somalia 373.00
    18. Romania 249.00
    19. Colombia 238.00
    20. Turkey 227.00
    21. Monaco 207.00
    22. Morocco 207.00
    23. Thailand 201.00
    24. Paraguay 150.00
    25. Guatemala 82.00
    26. Chad 50.00
    27. Iraq 50.00
    28. Haiti 48.00
    29. United Kingdom 35.00
    30. Laos 30.00
    31. Comoros 29.00
    32. Liberia 27.00
    33. Bangladesh 26.00
    34. Djibouti 6.00
    35. Israel 5.00
    36. Germany 3.00
    2020 Ranking
    1. Afghanistan 20,473.00
    2. Azerbaijan 7,623.00
    3. Syria 4,862.00
    4. Yemen 2,363.00
    5. Nigeria 1,997.00
    6. Somalia 1,942.00
    7. Ethiopia 1,343.00
    8. Congo (Kinshasa) 1,149.00
    9. Mozambique 924.00
    10. Iraq 858.00
    11. Libya 668.00
    12. India 584.00
    13. Mali 564.00
    14. Niger 512.00
    15. Burkina Faso 509.00
    16. Cameroon 429.00
    17. Pakistan 373.00
    18. Philippines 348.00
    19. Egypt 327.00
    20. Iran 204.00
    21. Chad 196.00
    22. Ukraine 195.00
    23. Turkey 190.00
    24. Burma (Myanmar) 158.00
    25. Kenya 94.00
    26. Burundi 63.00
    27. South Sudan 58.00
    28. Central African Republic 57.00
    29. Thailand 48.00
    30. Sudan 45.00
    31. Russia 32.00
    32. Colombia 28.00
    33. Tanzania 25.00
    34. Algeria 25.00
    35. Angola 21.00
    36. Armenia 10.00
    37. Peru 5.00
    38. Bangladesh 2.00

    Battle-related deaths are deaths in battle-related conflicts between warring parties in the conflict dyad (two conflict units that are parties to a conflict). Typically, battle-related deaths occur in warfare involving the armed forces of the warring parties. This includes traditional battlefield fighting, guerrilla activities, and all kinds of bombardments of military units, cities, and villages, etc. The targets are usually the military itself and its installations or state institutions and state representatives, but there is often substantial collateral damage in the form of civilians being killed in crossfire, in indiscriminate bombings, etc. All deaths–military as well as civilian–incurred in such situations, are counted as battle-related deaths.

    Source: Uppsala Conflict Data Program