There is no exact date. Just as the Japanese-Americans were identified, collected, and sent to camps at different times (mostly early 1942), they were released over a period of several months (mostly the first half of 1945).
A ruling by the US Supreme Court on December 18, 1944 followed previous rulings that military exclusion zones were legal, but said that the isolation and detention of citizens (clearly imprisonment) was not legal. The ruling is known as Ex Parte Endo after the plaintiff of the original case, Mitsuye Endo.
During World War II, approximately 120,000 Japanese Americans were forcibly relocated to internment camps in the United States. While the exact number of deaths directly attributed to the internment camps is difficult to determine, estimates suggest that around 1,800 individuals died in these camps, primarily due to inadequate medical care and harsh living conditions. The internment experience had lasting effects on the Japanese American community, both during and after the war.
Japanese Americans in internment camps during World War II faced harsh living conditions, inadequate medical care, and poor nutrition, which contributed to health issues and deaths. Some died from illnesses exacerbated by the unsanitary conditions and lack of proper medical facilities. Additionally, the psychological stress of internment and loss of freedom affected their overall health and well-being. While the exact number of deaths in the camps is not clearly documented, these factors significantly impacted their mortality rates.
The camps were dissolved over a period of many months from April to November, 1945 and some individuals (non-US citizens) remained in the camps as late as April, 1946 pending deportation to Japan.In January, 1945, the US Supreme Court upheld the exclusion of Japanese-Americans from military zones, but ruled that US citizens of Japanese descent could not be detained in camps.
After the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 on December 7th
The reasons are rather Un-American. The people of the government overreacted and wanted to round up all the Germans, Italians and Japanese to see if they were spies and keep them interned. They did not put the Germans and Italians into camps because famous people told the government people it would be unfair and impossible with the amount of Germans and Italians in the United States. No one spoke up on behalf of the Japanese. So they were interned unconstitutionally and unfairly. They could not understand the Japanese people had no allegiance to Japan and were not spies.
In the Holocaust satellite camps were smaller subcamps of major concentration camps. For example, Auschwitz had about 35 of them. to be exact they had 45 of them
While it is not known what the exact success rate is for fat camps, it is common that fat camps are very helpful for overweight people.
In concentration camps that were not officially extermination camps, disease was the primary cause of death. However, the exact numbers are unknown.
Around 500
It is estimated that around 27,000 to 37,000 Allied prisoners of war died in Japanese POW camps during World War II. The harsh conditions, including malnutrition, disease, forced labor, and brutal treatment, contributed to the high mortality rate. Most deaths occurred in camps in Southeast Asia, particularly those associated with the construction of the Burma Railway. The exact number remains difficult to determine due to incomplete records and varying definitions of captivity.
The best known are Buchenwald, Dachau, Mauthausen. (These were all concentatration camps rather than death camps in the more exact sense).
there is no exact number but i do know it was millions of Jews.