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  2. Italian Military Internees - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Military_Internees

    Prison camp for Italian military after the armistice of September 8, 1943, German propaganda photo "Italian Military Internees" (German: Italienische Militärinternierte, Italian: Internati Militari Italiani, abbreviated as IMI) was the official name given by Germany to the Italian soldiers captured, rounded up and deported in the territories of Nazi Germany and German-occupied Europe in ...

  3. Ferramonti di Tarsia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferramonti_di_Tarsia

    Ferramonti di Tarsia, also known as Ferramonti, [2] was an Italian internment camp used to intern political dissidents and ethnic minorities. It was located in the municipality of Tarsia, near Cosenza, in Calabria. It was the largest of the fifteen internment camps established by Benito Mussolini between June and September 1940.

  4. Campagna internment camp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campagna_internment_camp

    Campagna internment camp, located in Campagna, a town near Salerno in Southern Italy, was an internment camp for Jews and foreigners established by Benito Mussolini in 1940. The first internees were 430 men captured in different parts of Italy. [citation needed] Most of them were Jewish refugees came from Germany, Austria, Poland ...

  5. Italian war crimes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_war_crimes

    In 1911, Italy went to war with the Ottoman Empire and invaded Ottoman Tripolitania.One of the most notorious incidents during this conflict was the October Tripoli massacre, wherein an estimated 4,000 inhabitants of the Mechiya oasis were killed as retribution for the execution and mutilation of Italian captives taken in an ambush at nearby Sciara Sciat.

  6. Military history of Italy during World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_history_of_Italy...

    Italy enters the war: June 1940. Italy and its colonies in 1940, before the start of the Western Desert Campaign. On 10 June 1940, as the French government fled to Bordeaux during the German invasion, declaring Paris an open city, Mussolini felt the conflict would soon end and declared war on Britain and France.

  7. Rab concentration camp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rab_concentration_camp

    Under Italian army commander Mario Roatta's watch, the ethnic cleansing and violence committed against the Slovene and Croat civilian population easily matched that of the Germans [8] [9] with summary executions, hostage-taking and hostage killing, reprisals, internments (both in Rab and at the Gonars concentration camp), and the burning of houses and villages.

  8. Fort Missoula Internment Camp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Missoula_Internment_Camp

    Fort Missoula Internment Camp. Coordinates: 46°50′34″N 114°03′29″W. Barracks in Fort Missoula internment camp. Fort Missoula Internment Camp was an internment camp operated by the United States Department of Justice during World War II. Japanese Americans and Italian Americans were imprisoned here during this war.

  9. Internment of Italian Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internment_of_Italian...

    t. e. The internment of Italian Americans refers to the US government 's internment of Italian nationals during World War II. As was customary after Italy and the US were at war, they were classified as "enemy aliens" and some were detained by the Department of Justice under the Alien and Sedition Act. But in practice, the US applied detention ...