Their Full Name, Rank and Service Number.
Name, rank and identification number.
True.
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.
very badly, only slightly better than Jews were treated
they were returned to their respective country
12,000
True.
Under the Geneva Convention, a prisoner of war (POW) is only required to give name, rank and number.
True
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.
Name, Rank, Date Of Birth, Serial Number
an exchange of prisoners of war in North Vietnam
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.
very porly, only the treatment of Jews was worse.
The British allowed the prisoners some freedom in return for their promise not to resume war.
Prisoners of war were enslaved. They were the sources of slaves in antiquity.
Please clarify: Civil inmates? Prisoners of War? Concentration Camp Prisoners?
The axis treated their prisoners horribly. They experimented on them and tortured them. They would burn them and make them freeze to death. they would hardly ever feed them and never give them showers.