well it depends on which camp your talking about..
most were liberated in 1944-1945 by the allies (group of countries against Germany led by united states, Great Britain and Soviet Union).
Some of the extermination camps - Treblinka, Sobibor and Belzec were destroyed by the Nazis in 1943. In those cases there was nobody left to liberate.
July 1944
Germany dominated in the war in the west however after operation Barbarossa Britain liberated the west while the USSR beat the Germans in the north America dominated the war in the pacific (japan) and the Mediterranean (north Africa and Italy)
There are many names for a place where prisoners are held: bastille, brig, detention camp, dungeon, jail, jailhouse, lockup, pen, penal institution, penitentiary, pound, prison, reformatory, stockade
Paris was liberated on 25 th August, 81 days after D-Day.
n. a town in Germany, on the River Mulde: during World War II its castle was used as a top-security camp for Allied prisoners of war; many during escape attempts, some successful.
he blamed them for the reason Germany lost world war 1 and Germany's economic
The Allies liberated many Nazi and Axis concentration camps in World War Two.The prisoners of war were sent to concentration camps.
2% died in Germany 30% in Japan
The Allies liberated Europe from Nazi Germany and the Allies freed the people the Japanese had invaded .
Nearby Yes, Zwieibrucken. American Ex-Prisoners of War Organization, http://www.axpow.org
Germany took about 1.8 million French prisoners of war.
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I'm afraid that only one word in that question makes it mean something else. You said IN world war II. In the war, food wasn't issued to the prisoners very often at all, nor were they ever released. Well, you could get release via death. But afterwards, the prisoners were liberated, and, for those who survived long enough to get treatment, a LOT of food was issued to them to try to save their lives.
Reagan spent the war making movies in the U.S. the answer is a big NO. Moreover, Ausschwitz was liberated by the Russians.
Yes, prisoners were not drafted to serve in World War II. However, some prisoners of war were forced to work in labor camps or serve in military units.
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Please clarify: Civil inmates? Prisoners of War? Concentration Camp Prisoners?