Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/06/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> The death rate at Abu Grahib is in line with that experienced in > US prisons > and is somewhat lower than that normally experienced in POW camps over the > past 70 years. This is hardly a red flag, despite the claims of wild-eyed > fanatics thirsting most mightily to denigrate the US effort in Iraq. Marc, so could you give us, for example, the comparative figures for deaths in Abu Grahib and other detention and interrogation centres in Iraq and say, Italian and German POW's held in Britain during WWII? Or German POW's held in Canada during the same period? A quick bit of research shows, for example, that in one series of POW camps in one US State which held a total of 22,000 German POW's over a period of 3 years a total of 41 prisoners died, only 4 of which were listed as dying from "un-natural" causes. Again one POW camp in Canada had 12,500 prisoners over a three year+ period and had 22 prisoner deaths (which include 5 executed for the murder of two fellow prisoners) The rest listed as accidental (prisoners were working on farms etc) and a small number of suicides. But I'm assuming you have more comprehensive figures. Even so, this doesn't strike me as a very high percentage? tim 22 German prisoners that died in Lethbridge. Five of those were prisoners who were sentenced to death by the Canadian Government and hung for the murder of two fellow prisoners in the Medicine Hat Camp. Most of the deaths that occurred were accidental but some were suicidal.