In 1967 he was shot down and he was held as a prisoner-of-war in Hanoi for five-and-a-half years. |
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In that ruling, the justices said spies and saboteurs were violators of the law of war and so were not entitled to prisoner-of-war protections. |
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His amazing story, from historic pitched battles to prisoner-of-war experience, easily supports that testament. |
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A record number of veterans brought a forest of flags to a former Second World War prisoner-of-war camp for a solemn ceremony to remember fallen comrades. |
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Back in 1955, MacKinlay Kantor made the prisoner-of-war camp at Andersonville, Georgia, a byword for all of the horrors of the Civil War. |
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A prisoner-of-war chess set created by an American lieutenant while at Stalag Luft I, a POW camp near Barth, Germany. |
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It was then used as a prisoner-of-war camp, after which it reverted to open fields. |
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What was the name of the Napoleonic prisoner-of-war camp near Peterborough? |
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A NORTHUMBERLAND man who survived the horrors of a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp has died, just six months before his 100th birthday. |
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He can roll up his right sleeve to show the scars on the arm he almost lost in a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp. |
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A FORMER prisoner-of-war from North Wales yesterday told how he was caught up in the aftermath of the London bombings. |
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But granting the detainees prisoner-of-war status would allow them to refuse giving information other than their name, rank, and serial number. |
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There are various challenges that are common to all military historians but this paper will explore a few of the particular ones of prisoner-of-war history. |
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But some residents, who nicknamed it Stalag Luft after the notorious German prisoner-of-war camps, want it moved, saying it is an eyesore which blocks light. |
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Prisoner-of-war status would have allowed detainees to limit their responses to their name, rank and serial number, while unlawful combatants can be interrogated. |
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