According to the
Third Geneva Convention of 1929 and its predecessor, the
Hague Convention of 1907, Section IV, Chapter 2, these camps were only for
prisoners of war, not civilians. Stalags were operated in both
World War I and
World War II and were intended to be used for non-commissioned personnel (
enlisted ranks in the
US Army and
other ranks in
British Commonwealth forces).
Officers were held in separate camps called
Oflag. During World War II, the
Luftwaffe (German air force) operated
Stalag Luft in which flying personnel, both officers and non-commissioned officers, were held. The
Kriegsmarine (German navy) operated
Marlag for Navy personnel and
Milag for Merchant Navy personnel. Civilians who were officially attached to military units, such as war correspondents, were provided the same treatment as military personnel by the Conventions. The Third Geneva Convention, Section III, Article 49, permits non-commissioned personnel of lower ranks to be used for work in agriculture and industry, but not in any industry producing war material. Further articles of Section III detail conditions under which they should work, be housed and paid. During World War II these latter provisions were consistently breached, in particular for Russian, Polish, and Yugoslav prisoners. According to Nazi ideology,
Slavic people were regarded as
rassisch minderwertig ("racially inferior"). Starvation was a deliberate policy in the Stalags, particularly with regard to Soviet prisoners of war. The camps consisted of a field with barbed wire around it, in which thousands of people were crammed together. There was usually no room to sit or lie down. Also, there was often no shelter from the weather, which could be very cold in the Polish and Belarusian winter. The food provided was too little to keep the prisoners alive. In the Soviet Stalags, the death rate during the entire war was 57.5 percent, although during the last months of 1941 this rate must have been much higher. In comparison, the mortality rate for Stalags for Western Allies was below 5 percent.
More Soviet prisoners of war died every day in Nazi camps during the Autumn of 1941 than the total number of Western Allied POWs in the entire war. Prisoners of various nationalities were generally separated from each other by barbed-wire fences subdividing each stalag into sections. Frequently prisoners speaking the same language, for example British Commonwealth soldiers, were permitted to intermingle. ==
Arbeitskommandos ==