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Revision as of 08:09, 21 July 2006 editI like Burke's Peerage (talk | contribs)361 edits thanx for polish, but references (<ref>) should never ever bee deleted; the information given now could vanish later← Previous edit Revision as of 08:18, 21 July 2006 edit undoI like Burke's Peerage (talk | contribs)361 editsm selfrevert, must be a software bugNext edit →
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In ], ] Great Britain is alleged to have run a post-] ] ]. In ], ] Great Britain is alleged to have run a post-] ] ].


From 1945 - 1947 it was used to interrogate German prisoners, many of them communists, allegedly using physical maltreatment and intentional malnutrition (<ref> <ref/>, ). From 1945 - 1947 it was used to interrogate German prisoners, many of them communists, allegedly using physical maltreatment and intentional malnutrition (see , ).


The ] reported on British post-war activities in Bad Nenndorf. In Great Britain ] provocatively showed pictures of allegedly emaciated German prisoners (see). The ] reported on British post-war activities in Bad Nenndorf. In Great Britain ] provocatively showed pictures of allegedly emaciated German prisoners (see).

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In Bad Nenndorf, Germany Great Britain is alleged to have run a post-WWII interrogation centre.

From 1945 - 1947 it was used to interrogate German prisoners, many of them communists, allegedly using physical maltreatment and intentional malnutrition (see , ).

The NDR reported on British post-war activities in Bad Nenndorf. In Great Britain The Guardian provocatively showed pictures of allegedly emaciated German prisoners (see).

The Guardian (regarding torturing German Communists) wrote: Harrowing photographs of young men who had survived being systematically starved, as well as beaten, deprived of sleep and exposed to extreme cold, were considered too shocking to be seen.

Meanwhile German politicians demanded an apology from Britain (see ], ). The German newspaper Die Zeit claimed that there were other concentration camps such as Bad Nenndorf, but provided no proof to this charge.

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