Yes. German and Italian prisoners were kept in camps in Britain and the Isle of Man.
they die in prisoner war camps because they make them do boring maths.
POW camps for Communist (NVA/VC) Prisoners of War were operated by the South Vietnamese Government: See website: Prisoner-of-war Camps.
No, it is not legal to tattoo a prisoner of war (a captured soldier) forceably, the prisoners that were tattooed were the Jewish prisoners in the German concentration camps. These people were not prisoners of war (they were not soldiers).
Both the Union and the Confederacy treated prisoner very badly in prison camps. They were starved, lived in horribly unhealthy conditions, abused and killed. After the Civil War, the commander of one Southern prison camp was tried and hanged. No such penalties were applied to comanders of the Northern prsioner camps.
The Confederate prisoner-of-war camp refers to facilities established by the Confederacy during the American Civil War to detain Union soldiers captured in battle. One of the most infamous camps was Andersonville, known for its overcrowding, poor sanitation, and high mortality rates due to disease and starvation. Conditions in these camps were often dire, reflecting the resource limitations and challenges faced by the Confederacy. The treatment of prisoners in these camps has been a subject of considerable historical scrutiny and debate.
Prisoner of war camp FIRST
they die in prisoner war camps because they make them do boring maths.
bad
POW camps for Communist (NVA/VC) Prisoners of War were operated by the South Vietnamese Government: See website: Prisoner-of-war Camps.
they went to prisoner-of-war camps.
u need to be smart and study to no this
prisoner of war camps for soldiers, concentration camps for civilians.
There were several camps, but the most notorious was at Andersonville, Georgia
a POW is a prisoner of war.. The soldiers that were held in conentration camps and stuf like that
When was Guantenemo closed?
Chuck norris
No, it is not legal to tattoo a prisoner of war (a captured soldier) forceably, the prisoners that were tattooed were the Jewish prisoners in the German concentration camps. These people were not prisoners of war (they were not soldiers).