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.
Inadequate medical care
Some Japanese Americans died in the camps due to inadequate medical care and the emotional stresses they encountered. Several were killed by military guards posted for allegedly resisting orders.
Often through malnutrition and infectious diseases, Russian soldiers in German camps - and vice versa - and Allied soldiers in Japanese camps much more so than British and American soldiers in German camps. German prisoners of war were often shipped to the US and put to work there on farms and in factories.
Ramón Camps died in 1994.
W. A. Camps died in 1997.
François de Camps died in 1723.
They were killed.
they die in prisoner war camps because they make them do boring maths.
Charles Wedge of Shudy Camps died in 1842.
concentration camps are prisons in a sense where as extermination camps are like death row u will certainly die in a extermination camp.
work torcher then die
Concentration camps were death camps. The people that were scheduled to die were concentrated into areas for easier delivery to the death chambers.