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  1. Nov 3, 2019 · "the prisoner of war" journal The Red Cross and the St. John War Organisation. Prisoners of War Department. These were found in an old box of paperwork. I've scanned them as best I could. (very brittle) They will be donated to Monbulk RSL for safekeeping.

  2. Aug 15, 2023 · There were 35 million prisoners of war held during World War II. One soldier’s diary full of collages and drawings brings a human dimension to that number. The icon indicates free access to the linked research on JSTOR. “Killed in Action” was the tragic news Lieutenant Joseph “Ed” Carter’s family received from the front.

  3. Aug 18, 2022 · The Prisoner of War magazine was the official journal of the prisoners of war department of the Red Cross and St John war organisation based at St James’s Palace, London SW1. It was free to the next of kin of POWs. The Prisoner Of War Volume 2 #13, May 1943 The Prisoner Of War Volume 2 #15, July 1943 The Prisoner Of War Volume 2 #16,

    • David Lovell
  4. Mar 25, 2022 · However, we must not neglect the mental health care and welfare of prisoners of war (POWs), people living in detention, and psychiatric patients. During the current hostilities, both sides must arrange a sufficient standard of psychiatric and medical assistance for POWs (already estimated to be in the thousands), which is informed by international guidelines and the Geneva Convention.

  5. After footage emerged showing Russian prisoners of war being used by Ukrainian officials at a press conference, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) warned that such prisoners must ...

  6. S. P. MacKenzie. University of South Carolina. In any examination of the treatment afforded prisoners of war (POWs), the Second World War stands out both in terms of scale-approximately thirty-five million military personnel spent time in enemy hands between. 1939 and 19451-and in terms of the sheer range of behavior exhibited by.

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  8. Jul 7, 2024 · “American Prisoners of War in the Captive Atlantic, 1812–1815,” by Peter Hooker and Kit Candlin, Journal of Military History 87:4 (October 2023): 941–63 By 1812, a sophisticated system had emerged in the greater Anglo Atlantic for processing and housing of prisoners of war.

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