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Q: Under both the Code of Conduct and the Geneva Convention on Prisoners of War prisoners are required to give a captor only name rank identification number and date of birth?
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Under both the code of conduct and the Geneva convention on prisoners of war prisoners are required to give?

True.


What are prisoners of war only required to give?

Their Full Name, Rank and Service Number.


What countries were the prisoners taken to and what jobs were they required to perform?

Which prisoners? German,British,Russian,American? Need more info.


Under the Geneva convention prisoners of war are only required to give a captor their?

Name, Rank, Date Of Birth, Serial Number


What are Prisoners of war required to give their captor?

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.


What Under the Geneva conventions prisoners of war are only required to give a captor their?

Under the Geneva Convention, a prisoner of war (POW) is only required to give name, rank and number.


What did the POWs have to do in the camps?

Japanese and most German prisoners remained confined to Allied camps. Many Italian prisoners were allowed out to work on farms in Britain and Australia and in many cases left the camps for the duration of the war. As for Allied prisoners in Axis hands, the Japanese and to a lesser extent the Germans required prisoners to work, in the case of the Japanese, often to death.


In accordance with code of conduct you provide your captor with name rank service number?

The Geneva Convention requires all prisoners of war give their captors their name, rank, and service number. Captors are required to treat you according to your rank.


List the Provision of the Treaty of Ghent?

The Treaty of Ghent conditions were the end of hostilities, required that conquered territory & prisoners be returned


Why were German World War 2 prisoners moved to the US?

Most Americans are unaware that more than 400,000 Axis prisoners of war from Germany, Austria, and Italy were incarcerated in the US. These included the entire Afrika Corps captured in North Africa, Germans captured in Europe, and Naval prisoners. Initially they were to be housed in England, but England soon became aware that they didn't have room for so many. Consequently they asked that they be housed in the US. In addition, the prisoners had to be fed. Every pound of food sent to England was needed for the war effort. It didn't make sense to increase the food required to be shipped by the amount the prisoners would need. Finally the US realized that having control of Axis prisoners gave them a certain amount of influence over the folks holding Americans. So we got them.


What were the living the conditions of the prisoners in the concentration camps?

It really depends on what kind of prisoners you are speaking of, the Jews gypsies homosexuals disability personal etc or POWs. If you are speaking of the holocaust they were treated poorly with little food they were forced to work long hours on only one piece of bread. The Germans originally intended the barracks to house 40 prisoners, but very often more than 700 would be placed in each of them. The prisoners slept in 60 spaces, with three bunks in each space. Prisoners slept on straw spread over the wooden bunks. The barracks had earth floors and few sanitary facilities. Sanitary facilities for prisoners at Auschwitz-Birkenau were extremely poor. It was impossible for inmates to keep clean or have a change of clothes. For the first two years of the camp's existence the prisoners had no access to water for washing. When, later, there was water, it was not clean. Prisoners, therefore, spent their existence in the camp dirty and in filthy clothes, which increased the likelihood of them contracting infections and diseases. Meal times were the most important event of each day. After morning roll call the prisoners would be given their morning 'meal' -- imitation coffee or herbal 'tea'. For lunch prisoners would be given a litre of watery soup. If they were lucky, they might find a piece of turnip or potato peel. In the evening prisoners would be given a piece of black bread weighing 300 grams, together with a tiny piece of sausage, or margarine, marmalade or cheese. The bread was supposed to last the prisoners for the morning also, so prisoners would try to hide it on their person whilst they slept. The lack of food, poor diet and hard labour caused the prisoners to suffer from starvation sickness. They lost weight and muscle tissue and many thousands died. Others became too weak to work and were then murdered in the gas chambers. Prisoners were assigned to a whole range of different work duties. Some of these were within the camp, but most prisoners worked outside in one of the many factories, construction projects, farms or coal mines, owned by German companies and for whom they now provided free slave labour. For US POWs Germany was a signatory at the third Geneva convention which established the provisions relative to the treatment of Prisoners of War. Article 10 required that POWs should be lodged in adequately heated and lighted buildings where conditions were the same as German troops. Articles 27-32 detailed the conditions of labour. Enlisted Ranks were required to perform whatever labour they were asked and able to do, so long as it was not dangerous and did not support the German war effort. Senior Non-commisioned officers (sergeants and above) were required to work only in a supervisory role. Commisioned officers were not required to work, although they could volunteer. The work performed was largely agricultural or industrial, ranging from coal or potash mining, stone quarrying, or work in saw mills, breweries, factories, railroad yards, and forests. POWs hired out to military and civilian contractors were supposed to receive pay. The workers were also supposed to get a least one day a week of rest. Article 76 ensured that POWs who died in captivity were honourably buried in marked graves. I really hope this helps


How many times a week are prisoners required to change there clothes?

14 times because they have 1 set for morning to afternoon and then afternoon till next morning :)