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Looking for Geneva Convention Reference
I'm working on a piece on the presence of Pact and Pact allied soldiers in SAMAD based on their having been EPW. I know that a lot of Germans were housed in Texas during WW2 because EPW are supposed to be kept in a climate as similar as possible to the climate where they were captured. I can't find the specific reference in the Geneva Convention, though. Does anybody have sufficient familiarity to point me in the right direction? Thanks in advance.
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You're looking for the Third Geneva Convention. Full .pdf here:
http://www.mineaction.org/downloads/...tion%20III.pdf Skimming through, I can find nothing saying that prisoners of war have to be interred in a climate similar to where they were taken, just that Quote:
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Thanks, Cavtroop. I saw those, but as you have implied those two quotes don't address the issue of climate similarity. Certainly, my job explaining how 22 different nationalities/languages end up at Huachuca will be much easier if I don't have any climate restrictions in place. After all, it's hard to find an analog for North Korea anywhere in Arizona below 10,000 feet [elevation].
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I've never heard reference to climate restrictions for EPW placement in the Geneva convention (this, of course, does not mean that there are none). It just seems like something that I would have come across over the years in my forays into military history. A lot of German troops captured in Italy & France were held in the American Old South- a very different climate than western/central Europe.
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of course, you could also say that due to the circumstances after the TDM, they POWs are lucky they're being treated by any of the rules of the Geneva Conventions :) |
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I don't think there's any requirements under international law to keep prisoners in a similar climate. If I remember right, Afrika Korps and Italian prisoners from North Africa on the Commonwealth side were interned in Canada without any fuss (and probably much preferred by the prisoners to something more matching the environment of North Africa).
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There was a POW camp in Orkney which held a lot of Italians; they built this chapel.
http://www.orkneypics.com/webpage/page/page045.html But when I did an internet search to find it, I found a lot of POW built chapels survive, many of them built by Italians. I'd be willing to bet none of the Italian POWs were captured in a climate anything like Orkney- maybe they built the chapel to pray fro warmer weather? |
It seems like the consensus is that climate of the EPW camp is immaterial, so long as the EPW have proper housing, food, clothing, and care for the locality. Excellent.
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Japanese prisoners captured by Australians were kept in radically different environments to the hot, steamy jungles where they were caught. Instead of the balmy environment available in northern Queensland, they were kepts down south in the cold, cold countryside of southern NSW. There's a rather famous incident "The Cowra Breakout" which was made into a movie of the prisoners fabricating weapons from whatever was on hand and, you guessed it, attempted escape.
Most died either during the attempt, recapture or committed suicide after they failed. I suppose that's what happens when you are armed with baseball bats and broken glass going up against .303 rifles and machineguns. |
If I remember right, there was a similar incident in Canada where Japanese POWs overpowered and killed some guards, escaped, and then just sat there waiting for the responding forces to shoot them. They apparently had no real aim in the escape attempt except to die in an appropriate manner.
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