In accordance with the Geneva Convention.
Americans did not have concentration camps. They did have POW camps but those were totally different. They were treated good and healthy. Most German Solders surrounded to the Americans late in the was because they knew they treated you good and they didn't want to desert the German Army and be counted as a coward.
The Australians treated the Japanese well in POW camps and gave them better food and water than the Japanese gave them, better shelter, medical attention, clothing and cigarettes.
concentration camps were German , NONE were Polish !!!
No states in America had concentration camps; they were all located in Europe. The states did have camps for people who were German or Japs to live because people were afraid, but they were not treated poorly.
Australian POWs were treated as appallingly as other whites in Japanese camps. They were used as slave labour.
Yes, there were German internment camps in America during World War II. These camps held German nationals, German Americans, and other individuals of German descent who were considered potential threats to national security.
The point was to prevent prisoners having any money that could be used outside the camps.
they were treated a lot worse.
because the camps were there for their protection
The German concentration camps were used to EXECUTE the Jews and the other "inferior races" so I would think that the camps did not have any health rules.
Prisoners of German and Japanese Concentration Camps were usually on starvation diets and were worked, generally to death. Many prisoners deemed "unfit to survive" were shot, hung, gassed and then buried in mass graves or cremated and then the ashes spread to the winds. Other camps, such as the Star Camp and Hungarian Camp, the inmates were treated decently.
A prisoner in charge at the camps (concentration camps, death camps, forced labor camps) during the Holocaust. These people were typically non-Jewish (Jews were treated the worst in the camps).