THE PRESIDENT: Then the witness can retire. M. DUBOST: With your permission, we shall p [ ... ]
deported to Germany, where they were placed in camps -- locked in camps or in prison. With regard to the prisons, the information that we have concer [ ... ]
that was carried out, the duration required, the day's labor, was about twelve hours. At Cologne, specifically, from 7 o'clock in the morning to 9 O' [ ... ]
At Asperg the doctor had innoculated the heart of an internee which caused death. At Cologne there was a worker condemned to death who was perpetual [ ... ]
they were rejected by some actions. prison were still less cruel by far than those who had the misfortune of being sent to a concentration camp. The [ ... ]
ourselves for the present, if the Tribunal please, to the reading of passages from the testimony of Jacobs -- Madame Gilberte Jacob. As to what was t [ ... ]
And on page 6, the penultimate paragraph, Colonel Von Berg was, as we have already said earlier, very spectacular. graph: "In spite of his title of [ ... ]
brought their internees there in the month of September. They were Jews. The Belgian Government could not know how many people were interned from Sep [ ... ]
conditions of the prisoners interned. They were isolated from other internees, and they were subjected to a very severe regime in their cells. They [ ... ]
THE PRESIDENT: This is a long report, is it not? M. DUBOST: That is why I am summarizin [ ... ]