Geneva conventions
According to the Geneva Convention, prisoners of war must be given adequate medical care, food, clothing, and housing.Prisoners of war cannot be used to produce military goods or materials that might be used against their countrymen in battle.
yes
Prisoners of war are required to provide their name, rank, service number, and date of birth to their captors, as outlined in the Geneva Conventions. They are not obligated to provide any additional information beyond what is required by international law.
The principle that applies to prisoner of war is the principle of reciprocity. This means that each side must treat prisoners of war with the same rights and privileges as their own military personnel, as outlined in international laws such as the Geneva Conventions.
an exchange of prisoners of war in North Vietnam
Prisoners of war were enslaved. They were the sources of slaves in antiquity.
Margarete Dos has written: 'Letters from Berlin' -- subject(s): Correspondence, Prisoners of war, Nurses, German Personal narratives, Soviet Prisoners and prisons, Deutsches Rotes Kreuz, World War, 1939-1945, Medical care, Biography
Piero Redaelli has written: 'Dalla steppa russa al duomo di Danzica' -- subject(s): Biography, German Prisoners and prisons, Italian Personal narratives, Medical care, Medical personnel, Personal narratives, Italian, Prisoners and prisons, German, Prisoners of war, World War, 1939-1945
Please clarify: Civil inmates? Prisoners of War? Concentration Camp Prisoners?
John R. Bumgarner has written: 'Parade of the dead' -- subject(s): American Personal narratives, Bataan, Battle of, Philippines, 1942, Biography, Campaigns, History, Japanese Prisoners and prisons, Medical care, Personal narratives, American, Physicians, Prisoners and prisons, Japanese, Prisoners of war, World War, 1939-1945
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When the war ended.