3/31/2021

All Quiet on the Western Front at World War written by Erich Paul Remark in the movie, a German soldier "Paul Bäumer" killed a French soldier in a trench with a knife.

In the World War I film "All Quiet on the Western Front," German volunteer Paul Bäumer stabs a French soldier in the chest with a knife after he charges into a trench. The French soldier, played by the aphasic Raymond Griffith, died in mute agony, unable to speak. Paul Boehmer found a notebook in the pocket of a French soldier. The soldier's name was Gerard Duval, and he was carrying a photograph of his wife and daughter. In 1930, the American black-and-white film "Western Front" won the third Academy Award for Best Picture. Director Lewis Milestone won the award for best director. The film starred Liu Ayers as the protagonist, Paul Boehmer, a volunteer soldier in the German army.

 In the film, Paul Boehmer was adapted to stretch out his hand from the trench to the chow and expire when an enemy Allied soldier shot him with a rifle and killed him. around May 1918, Paul Boehmer was shot dead and fell forward prostrate, lying on the ground as if asleep. When the body was turned over, there were no signs of long suffering. His face had a somber expression, as if he was content and ready to meet his end. Regardless of the death of Paul Boehmer, the complaint was reported to the headquarters: "Nothing unusual on the Western Front, nothing to report.

 The original author, Erich Maria Remarque, was born in Germany and was a novelist who was drafted into the German army during World War I. Throughout the dangerous years of the war, he experienced many battlefields. After the war, he worked as a school teacher, theater critic, race car driver, and sports magazine editor. His first novel, Western Front Unusual, was published in Germany in January 1929. It sold over 2.5 million copies and was his first of many literary triumphs. When Nazi Germany came to power, Remarque left Germany and fled to Switzerland. He refused to return to Germany, lost his German citizenship, had his novels burned in book burnings, and his films banned (see photo). He came to the U.S. in 1938, became a U.S. citizen in 1947, and died in September 1970.



3/30/2021

The bodies of five civilians involved in the Cambodian Civil War were scattered in the suburbs of Phnom Penh, and police officers surrounded them.

Five corpses covered with white cloth were accumulated side by side in the middle of a temple inside Phnom Penh, Cambodia on July 7, 1997. Five corpses of Cambodian citizens were scattered on the outskirts of Phnom Penh. Uniformed police officers surrounded the corpses; the five bodies were murdered in a car that had countless bullet holes left in it. A Lanalitha identity card was left in the wallets of the bodies. They were driving out of Phnom Penh to escape capture by Hun Sen's troops when they were spotted by Hun Sen's forces, shot and killed.

 On July 5, 1997, Hun Sen's troops swept into Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia, and swept through the city. While Cambodian citizens were fleeing the city, the army soldiers opened fire in a deadly rage. The army indiscriminately shelled and shot at the city, including civilians, in order to clear out the Ranaritists. On July 7, Hun Sen's forces completely overran the capital Phnom Penh.

 The Cambodian Civil War ended with the Paris Peace Accords of October 23, 1991, which gave the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) provisional rule over Cambodia; in May 1993, UNTAC, whose special representative is Yasushi Akashi, held general elections in Cambodia. In May 1993, UNTAC, whose special representative was Yasushi Akashi, held general elections in Cambodia. The Ranaritist Hunsinpec Party, which originated from King Sihanouk, won about 45% of the vote, and the Hun Senist People's Party won 39%. The Kingdom of Cambodia was established with Ranarit as the first Prime Minister and Hun Sen as the second Prime Minister. From then on, the Lanarit-led Hunsinpec Party and the Hun Sen-led People's Party clashed with each other.

 On July 5, 1997, Hun Sen's forces of the People's Party triggered a coup d'etat and armed clashes with Lanarit forces while Lanarit was on a foreign visit. The Lanaritists were defeated and Lanarit was dismissed as prime minister. The Lanalit forces continued to fight on the Thai border with the Pol Pot forces.



3/29/2021

On the morning after the break-out bodies of dead Japanese lay everywhere outside the blanket-draped barbed-wire fence at cowra breakout.

A Japanese prisoner of war from a POW camp around Cowra, Australia, was shot and his body laid outside the fence shortly after he escaped with a blanket of barbed wire covering him. Suddenly a Japanese bugler sounded. The sentry fired a warning shot. Japanese POWs began to break through the barbed wire from the north, west, and south sides in groups, shouting "Banzai". More patrols opened fire. The Japanese POWs escaped by flying across the wire with the help of blankets. The Japanese became the most humiliating act of extermination of POW status. The escaped Japanese threw themselves under the train and many hanged themselves. Rather than be captured, some Japanese begged to be shot.

 On Friday, August 4, 1944, in response to a tip-off that the Japanese were discussing a major escape, all Japanese POWs were notified that they were to be transferred to the Hay POW camp. at about 2:00 a.m. on Saturday, August 5, 1944, a Japanese POW, a prisoner, shouted to the gates of the camp, "You are not allowed to leave! Shortly thereafter, an unauthorized bugle call was heard. Armed with knives and improvised clubs, the Japanese prisoners rushed from their huts and began to break through the wire fence. The sentry opened fire, but hundreds of prisoners escaped into the open Australian compound, while the rest opened fire on the camp buildings.

 By August 1944, during the Pacific War, there were about 2,223 Japanese prisoners of war in Australia, including about 544 merchant seamen. About 1,104 of them were being held at Camp B of No. 12 POW camp near Cowra in the central western part of New South Wales. On the night of the Cowra breakout, when the Japanese prisoners made their grand escape, three Australian soldiers were killed and three more wounded. Over the next nine days, some 334 Japanese prisoners were rearrested. In all, some 234 Japanese prisoners were killed and 108 wounded.



3/28/2021

In the Battle of Okinawa, the mother struggled to the death and escaped the battlefield barefoot and survived with her child on her back.

During the Battle of Okinawa, a mother survived by fleeing the battlefield barefoot with her child on her back. She cowered in anxiety and fear among a group of Okinawan residents captured by the U.S. military. Caught up in the fierce Battle of Okinawa, the civilian population of Okinawa fled for their lives. Girls and children alike were evacuated from the battlefield. Left in the middle of the battlefield between the American and Japanese forces, the trapped civilians were eventually ordered by the Japanese to take their own lives and commit suicide. Numerous mass suicides by women and children also occurred. Where many Okinawans had taken refuge, Japanese troops fled just to avoid war and forcibly commandeered shelters, forcing Okinawans to flee under shells and bullets, resulting in abuse and massacre.

 Not only the Okinawans who lost their refuge in the battlefield of Okinawa, but also the Okinawans who worked with the Japanese forces were tragically killed in the horrific battle. In the Battle of Okinawa, the two armies fought to the death with all their might. They turned the Okinawans into a force to be reckoned with, down to the smallest tree and plant, and forced them to die together with the military, government, and civilians. The Japanese military mobilized Okinawans uprooted, and civilians were taught to die in the same way as soldiers. The number of deaths among Okinawans amounted to more than 94,000, more than the number of deaths among Japanese soldiers.

 On April 1, 1945, the U.S. forces landed from the thinly populated mid-western coast of Okinawa, and by April 20, they had taken control of the Okinawa Peninsula in the northeastern part of the island.

 The U.S. forces encountered fierce resistance from the garrison around the military headquarters at Shuri in central Okinawa from around April 6, 1945. After more than 40 days of back-and-forth offensive and defensive battles, the American forces broke through the central front and reached the defense line of the military headquarters below Shuri Castle, where they launched an all-out attack starting on May 11. The Japanese forces fought hard, but were suddenly defeated in southern Okinawa on May 22, and Shuri was occupied by the Americans.

 In the southern part of Okinawa, the American forces hunted down not only the Japanese troops, who sacrificed some 60,000 soldiers, but also the Okinawans in a sweeping battle. The southern part of the island was turned into a miserable battlefield where the Japanese troops were defeated and the Okinawans were evacuated. The U.S. forces attacked with all kinds of modern weapons, including artillery, bombs, and flamethrowers. Organized fighting by the Japanese ended on June 23.



3/27/2021

At the schoolyard of Honkawa National School, about 410m from the hypocenter of the Hiroshima atomic bomb, a large number of corpses in the vicinity were collected and cremated.

On August 8, 1945, about two days after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima at 8:15 a.m. on August 6, 1945, a large number of corpses from the area were collected and cremated in the schoolyard of the Honkawa National School, located across the river from the hypocenter. From the next day, August 7, the school building, whose outer walls were still burned, became a temporary aid station and was filled with A-bomb survivors. In the schoolyard, many bodies that had been identified were cremated. The crematorium was photographed by a member of the Hiroshima Prefectural Police Department's photography team. The burned-out school building was used as a first aid station for A-bomb survivors, and a pile of dead bodies was built in the schoolyard.

 The Honkawa National School in Hiroshima City was the closest elementary school to the hypocenter of the atomic bombing. It is located across the Aioi Bridge from the Atomic Bomb Dome. As the closest elementary school to the hypocenter, only about 410 meters away, Honkawa National School (now Honkawa Elementary School) was severely damaged. The school building was destroyed by fire, leaving only the outside, and miraculously only one teacher and one student out of the principal, ten other teachers, and about 400 children in the first and second grades survived. Only one teacher and one student were miraculously saved. Six teachers and 218 children, including the principal, were killed instantly.

 Classes resumed the following year, in February 1946, in a school building that had been minimally repaired in order to rebuild it. The A-bombed school building was repeatedly repaired and renovated, and in April 1988, when the new school building was completed, it was demolished, leaving only a part of the A-bombed school building and the basement. In April 1988, when the new school building was completed, only a part of the A-bombed school building and the basement were left, and they were preserved as the Peace Museum, which opened in May 1988. Burned-out remains from that time still remain, mainly in the basement. The damage caused by the atomic bomb was preserved as proof of the atomic bombing. Many of the items on display were collected from the A-bombed area by former teachers of the school.

 Mr. Nakazawa was six years old when he was exposed to the atomic bomb near the school gate on his way to Kanzaki National School, about 1.2 km from the hypocenter. Based on his own experience of the atomic bombing, he depicted a young boy living strongly in Hiroshima, and on March 18, 1975, the evening edition of the Asahi Shimbun carried an article titled "A-bomb gekiga to be published in book form. About two months later, in May, Shiobunsha published a four-volume book of the story. The article and the book attracted a great deal of attention to Barefoot Gen. The author died of lung cancer on December 19, 2012. Barefoot Gen has been translated into 18 languages, and its total circulation has exceeded 10 million copies.



3/26/2021

Shooting of 12 people from Skoje in Stari Becej on November 11, 1941 by Hungarian fascists. The wall in front of which they were shot was called the "Wall of Death".

Hungarian fascist troops shot and killed 12 partisans in Stalibechei, Skopje, the capital of Macedonia, on November 11, 1941. On January 20, 1942, Nazi Germany gunned down 11 more communists in front of the Wall of Death. The Wall of Death still exists today and is protected as a cultural monument. In the photo, he lifted his clenched fist or raised his fist to remove his blindfold. Immediately after being shot, he stood up and shouted, "The Communist Party of Yugoslavia lives - death to fascism! he shouted. Immediately after that, he was beaten and shot dead. The secretary of the district committee of the Youth Communist League was arrested with him. During the arrest, they killed a fascist MP and wounded another MP.

   Photos were kept of young men saying goodbye to relatives: in one, a young man says goodbye to his crying mother; in another, a young man says goodbye to his father; in a third, a young man says goodbye to his brother. 11 members of the Youth Communist League shot dead on January 20, 1942 included the secretary of the district committee and a member o Among the 11 Young Communist League members shot dead on January 20, 1942 were the secretary of the district committee and a member o

 On January 27, 1942, Hungarian fascists murdered about 244 more Serbs, Jews, and Roma in Staribechei. They were thrown under the ice of the frozen Tisza River. Among those murdered were about 124 men, 86 women, 19 elderly people, and 15 children. 



3/25/2021

At the Krakow-Płaszów concentration camp in southern Poland, Jewish women were stripped naked and driven past German soldiers.

A Jewish woman is stripped naked and driven past the eyes of German soldiers at the Kraków-Płaszów concentration camp on the outskirts of Kraków in southern Poland. This photograph was submitted as a document for the Nuremberg Trials. Those found guilty were stripped naked and shot to death in a trench on the hillside. The warden, Armon Goethe, was found guilty of murder and was hanged on September 13, 1945, at Montelpitch Prison in Krakow.

 It was a concentration camp run by the SS of Nazi Germany. Most of its prisoners were Polish Jews who had been targeted for purges by Nazi Germany during the Holocaust. Many prisoners died as a result of executions, forced labor, and poor conditions in the camp. They died. While the main function of the concentration camps was forced labor, the camps were also places of mass murder of prisoners as well as those brought from outside. Compared to other camps, women and children were in larger numbers, but received male and unrest treatment. The main targets were the elderly and the sick. Since there were no gas chambers or crematoria, the mass killings were carried out by shooting. The maximum number of prisoners confined exceeded about 20,000, and thousands were killed, mostly by gunfire. To destroy evidence, mass graves were opened and bodies were exhumed and burned. The concentration camps were liberated by the Soviet Red Army on January 20, 1945 in this area.

 The Krakow Ghetto was set up by Nazi Germany in one of Poland's largest cities. It was established to exploit, terrorize, and persecute local Polish Jews during the German occupation of Poland in World War II. The ghetto was later used as a segregated area to segregate able-bodied workers for deportation to the extermination camps of Operation Reinhard. The Kraft Ghetto was liquidated between June 1942 and March 1943. Prisoners who were able to work in the Kraft ghetto were forcibly taken to the Krakow-Płasz concentration camp. Most of the other Judaizers were deported to Belzec extermination camp and Płasz forced labor camp and Auschwitz concentration camp for massacre. 



3/24/2021

Helmet-clad members were killed on abandoned streets in response to civil and student riots in the Republic of Nicaragua.

Helmeted troops patrolled the abandoned streets in response to civil and student riots in the Central American Republic of Nicaragua. Mothers and fathers wailed beside the butchered bodies of their young men. In the destroyed street, the body of a young man lay under a white sheath. The corpse was barefoot and covered with linen carried by a weeping mother. Neighborhood friends stood and marveled, grieving with handkerchiefs.

 In the Republic of Nicaragua, protests calling for Ortega's ouster escalated in a campaign that lasted nearly two months. The government has responded with a relentless crackdown: at least about eight people were killed in protests on June 16, 2018, and a total of 178 people have been killed in protests that have broken out since April On April 16, 2018, the government enforced an increase in social security contributions and a cut in pensions of about 5 percent Protests have broken out since April 18. Protests erupted on April 18. The Onetega administration in Nicaragua forcibly suppressed the protests by deploying police and ruling party armed groups, and from April 21, violently attacked protesters in various areas, firing live ammunition, resulting in a sharp increase in casualties. A large pro-Ortega rally by the ruling party was also held on May 9 to counter the protests. The anti-Ortega group of citizens and students clashed with the pro-Ortega group of the ruling party.

 Clashes and incidents of violence have continued in the Republic of Nicaragua, resulting in many casualties. In addition to calling for an immediate halt to the violence, a declaration in support of the Nicaraguan people was agreed upon and adopted by the regular General Assembly of the Organization of American States (OAS) on June 5, 2018. The Government of Nicaragua is expected to accept and facilitate the deployment of the Special Follow-up Mechanism (MESENI) and the Group of Independent Experts (GIEI) by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), as well as the field work of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR). Consultation in accordance with democratic principles is important, and it is urgent that the issues be resolved through dialogue under the mediation of the Bishops' Conference. There have been few large-scale demonstrations, and small-scale demonstrations by some anti-government civil society groups have occurred spontaneously and have been suppressed by the police.



3/23/2021

The look of the murdered Chechen soldier was too old. Even when he faced death on the battlefield, he became sentimental and his emotions disappeared.

When the Russians invaded Chechnya on December 11, 1994, a Chechen death squad remained in the capital city of Kiev in February 1995, almost two months after the invasion. They struggled in guerrilla warfare in the city of Grozny. However, the Russians overwhelmed them with their armed forces: in June 1995, the Chechen army gained the upper hand over the Russians in guerrilla warfare in the mountains, and in August 1996, the Chechens took the Russian troops stationed in Grozny by surprise.

 In a wooded area, white smoke was seen rising from burning houses. A foul odor, presumably from the Russian army's chemical weapons, hung in the air. About two hours after inhaling the foul odor, I developed a variety of symptoms, including nausea, fever, headache, diarrhea, and vomiting, which I thought were caused by poison gas. I gradually lost my energy and fell into a weak mood. The bunker was bombarded near the exit and four casualties were dragged through the exit, two of whom were ruptured in the head and suffered brain death. Two of them were ruptured in the head and suffered brain death; their convulsive movements disappeared and they went into rigor mortis. The expression on the faces of the deceased Chechen soldiers was too old. They became emotionless and lost their emotions in the face of death, which is a common occurrence on the battlefield.

 The first Chechen (Chechen) conflict took place between December 11, 1994 and August 31, 1996 between the pro-independence armed forces of the Chechen Republic, who were seeking independence from the Russian Federation, and the Russian forces of the Eritrean regime, who were trying to stop them. The Russian military, despite its overwhelming military strength, was greatly weakened and exposed as vulnerable compared to the Soviet Union due to the chaos and military budget cuts following the collapse of the Soviet Union. In August 1996, the total number of casualties was over 5,732 Russian troops and 16,299 Chechen forces. From August 6, 1996, Chechen militants raided Grozny, and Russian troops withdrew from Chechnya under the terms of the Hasav Yurt Agreement. The Russian military withdrew from Chechnya in February 2000. Russian troops reoccupied the capital Grozny in February 2000, and Chechnya came under the control of the Russian government. 




3/22/2021

Dead bodies of civilians shot at a place called “la Prele," Gerbéviller. Many people were massacred. Some were led into the fields and shot by German troops.

In World War I, about 60 civilians were shot and massacred by the Germans on August 24, 1914 in an area called La Prele in Gerbevier, Belgium. Some of the people were taken to a field and shot dead. Civilians were murdered as they tried to flee their homes or burning buildings. In addition to the killings, countless acts of violence took place. (Photo reproduced from the report of the French Official Commission.)

 The Germans invaded neutral Belgium on August 4, 1914, and starting on August 5, civilians were executed en masse as the invading forces invaded the first obstacle, a ring of fortifications around Liege. In retaliation for the shelling from these fortifications, the Germans killed the inhabitants of the surrounding villages. Victims were selected and shot, and those still alive were bayoneted to death. by August 8, nearly 850 civilians had been killed. By that time, certain abuses and massacres had been carried out. First, massacres occurred where the invasion forces had been foiled. The Germans considered the military defense of Belgium to be illegitimate. Second, the victims were mistakenly killed as civilian sniper soldiers. They mistakenly believed that local civilians were attacking the Germans. The delusion of civilians as snipers was chosen by the German commanders. Third, while some of the victims were women, children, and the elderly, the vast majority were civilians. The invading forces were outraged that the torn apart civilians were still enjoying life. Fourth, the massacre also brought with it a public ritual to show how helpless the civilians were. Civilians were always forced to support the army. Local dignitaries were publicly abused and in some cases murdered.

 The German invasion of the Western Front began on August 18, and by August 28, the invasion force had crossed Belgium. By August 28, the invasion forces had crossed Belgium, and in the intervening ten days, the worst massacres had been carried out. The troops, exhausted from the forced marches and often under the influence of alcohol, committed massacres. Towns and villages were looted and burned, and survivors were deported. The hardest hit areas were Aartscourt on August 19 and Andanne on August 20. On August 22, Taminne, a small industrial city on the Meuse River, had about 383 residents killed. On August 23, in Dinan, the worst massacre of the invasion killed about 674 people, about one in ten residents. In the university town of Louvain, some 248 civilians were killed when the valuable university library was burned to the ground. Further south, hundreds of people were executed in the Belgian Ardennes. Snipers were killed in groups of about ten. The last were made to climb a mound of corpses to be shot. Similar killings, albeit on a smaller scale, were executed in invaded France. The first civilians were shot dead north of the Moselle River on August 9. Among other massacres, about 60 people were killed in Gerbevier, a large village in Lorraine, on August 24. The invading forces emphasized their superiority through massacres. In the small town of Werftel, north of Louvain, where the victims of the mass executions were buried, a triumphal arch was erected with the inscription "To the Victorious Warriors.



3/21/2021

On October 30, 1936, the first day of that war, 100 schoolchildren were killed playing in the sunlit streets of Getafe, near Madrid by three of the Nazi German dive bombers.

The Spanish Civil War broke out on July 17, 1936. On October 30, 1936, the first day of that war, 100 schoolchildren were killed playing in the sunlit streets of Getafe, near Madrid. Three of the Nazi German dive bombers supporting Franco's forces flew over the small village. They dropped their bombs on the street where the children were playing. The bombs exploded, killing about 70 school children of both sexes. A British journalist saw Spanish parents searching for the bodies of their children. The group of bodies was put into a small delivery truck owned by a local grocery store. The scene was so horrific. The pictures also showed the destroyed bodies of small victims of fascism and the bodies of children lying dead in the schools they attended.

 In the middle of the Spanish Civil War, the Nazi Germans dropped bombs on four small villages in the middle of the province of Castellón in the Valencia region in May 1938. A few days later, Nazi German soldiers jumped into a car to survey the damage caused by the air raid. They verified from the swept wreckage the center of the crater caused by the impact of the bombs, while recording the impact of the bombing. The Nazi German group then returned to the air base near Rathenia, Tarragona, where they wrote down and reported the details of their mission. The four villagers of Benazar, Arbocacel, Ares del Maestre and Villardecanes, the center of the village in May 1938, were hit by three new dive bombing stalks, killing about 38 relatives and neighbors, records suggested. Nazi Germany's Condor Legion raided four Spanish villages as a testing ground for future dive bombings in preparation for World War II.

 In its Thursday, November 12, 1936 issue, the DAILY WORKERS newspaper published the casualties of school children of the Spanish Civil War. Until then they had been playing peacefully. However, the attack of the fascist regime brought death threats to the children as well. Twelve days earlier, on October 30, Nazi German dive bombers had killed about 70 Spanish children who were playing in the same way. Until then, we refrained from publishing photos showing the massacre of men and women by the barbaric armed forces of Franco's regime during the Spanish Civil War. Mere fear alone, then, will not help strengthen our resolve to fight fascism and defend democracy.

 But the newspaper's photos of the indiscriminate massacre of children are more than just horror. Fascism suggested the most horrific toll of the civil war that is hurting the people of Spain. They in the pictures only hinted at the reality. Modern warfare, with fighter planes and poison gas, has reaped mass deaths on a peaceful population. The corpses of dainty doll-like girls and horrible brutal boys were strewn about. There is an abomination in war, and it has engulfed children in the horrors of war. Shocking, of course, but shocking to realize that dead children were the price of brutal, militaristic attacks on peaceful people. The same price of death must be paid by the butchers of death themselves until they are destroyed. Make up your mind by looking at the war photos, and blow by blow, democracy will be your reply to us until we win the only path to peace.



3/20/2021

Army troops are dwarfed by the towering cloud of an exploding atomic bomb during maneuvers at the Nevada Proving Ground in the autumn of 1951 under the joint auspices of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and the Department of Defense.

 The U.S. Army Corps, under the joint control of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and the Department of Defense, could see the towering mushroom cloud of an atomic bomb exploding during a maneuver at the Nevada Nuclear Test Site in the fall of 1951 from a distance of about 160 kilometers. Numerous Army personnel from the nuclear test were cheering as they witnessed the event from a distance. The first nuclear test in history was conducted on July 16, 1945 in Ala mode, New Mexico, followed by a nuclear test in the Marshall Islands on July 1, 1946, and a nuclear test in Nevada on January 27, 1951.

 The Nevada Test Site (NTS) is a nuclear test site managed by the United States Department of Energy. It is located in the Nevada Desert in the U.S. state of Nevada, about 105 km northwest of Las Vegas, in a desert and mountainous region. 1,760 square kilometers of Nellis Air Force Base in southern Nevada was approved by the Truman Administration as the Nevada Test Site on December 18, 1950. In August 2010, the official name was changed to the Nevada National Security Site (NNSS). In the past, atmospheric nuclear tests and, since September 1961, underground nuclear tests have been conducted at the site, but currently subcritical nuclear tests are being conducted.

 Mushroom clouds from the atmospheric tests could be seen at a distance of about 160kmm. In the 1950s and early 1960s, many tourists could see the emission and the mushroom cloud from their hotel windows. Hotels advertised these sights. Some casinos held "dawn parties" and created atomic-themed cocktails to encourage visitors to view the tests. Calendars around the city also advertised the time of the explosion and the best spots to watch for flashes, lights, and mushroom clouds.

 The radioactivity produced by the nuclear explosion was suspended by the prevailing westerly winds to the states of St. George and southern Utah. In particular, atmospheric nuclear tests released large amounts of radioactive iodine into the atmosphere. The exposure to this radioactivity led to a marked increase in the incidence of malignant neoplasms of thyroid, breast, prostate, and digestive cancers, leukemia, and lymphoma. Under pressure from concerns about the fallout, the US Army switched its nuclear testing from the atmosphere to underground testing.

 The first nuclear test at the Nevada Test Site was on January 27, 1951, when about 1 kton of TNT (4.2 TJ) bombs were dropped on Frenchman Flat. In the following years until 1992, more than about 1,021 nuclear explosions were tested. Live action cameras were used to capture the effects of radiation and shock waves from protected locations. The U.S. did not ratify the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, but did conduct the last underground test of a divider on September 23, 1992. This was announced as the end of underground nuclear testing of nuclear weapons and the continuation of subcritical testing.



3/19/2021

In the Vietnam War, a terrified Vietnamese mother escaping with her injured child during a fight between US and Viet Cong forces near Ba Làng An Peninsula.

 In the Vietnam War, a Vietnamese mother ran through a hail of bullets, holding her mortally wounded child in both hands as she skirted the raging battlefield. The mother panicked and staggered across the battlefield. Her eyes were unusually wide with fear and anxiety, and she wailed with grief. As the U.S. military became fully involved in the Vietnam War in 1965, the number of civilian casualties increased dramatically.

 Since 1963, the Viet Cong (VC) turned Cape Ba Làng An into a fortified stronghold; on August 24, 1965, the U.S. Marine Corps intelligence headquarters assumed that the Viet Cong had withdrawn from their fortifications from the Ba Làng An Peninsula. The U.S. Marines, the Army of the Republic of Vietnam, and the Vietnamese Marines conducted Operation Piranha on the peninsula from September 7-10, 1965. During this operation, the US forces killed approximately 178 Viet Cong (VC) and captured approximately 360 VC and suspected Vietnamese. Coalition casualties included about two U.S. Marines and about five South Vietnamese soldiers killed. Due to indiscriminate shelling zones, the number missing may have been civilian Vietnamese.

 In an effort to stop communism in Vietnam, the U.S. military intervened in earnest in 1965 to assist South Vietnam. In response to the Gulf of Tonkin incident, under special authority, the U.S. began bombing North Vietnam on March 2. On April 21, the U.S. announced an increase in the number of U.S. troops to about 60,000. On August 31, the Johnson administration signed a law making it illegal to burn draft cards, resulting in five years in prison and a $1,000 fine. By the end of September, the number of U.S. troops stationed in Vietnam exceeded about 130,000, with 35,000 new troops being drafted each month. in early 1969, the number of U.S. troops had swelled to about 544,000.



3/18/2021

The modern projectiles, with their increased vital force, no longer caused simple fractures, but, depending on the impact and distance, the most severe shattering.

Facial injuries from World War I war wounds have had a destructive effect on bone tissue and soft tissue. The gunshot wounds were not only the result of the projectiles of ammunition, but the effects of their explosion ruptured from the bone tissue, and much of that bone debris was converted into new projectiles, which erupted in funnel form in all directions, shredding the soft tissue.

 The Germans entered World War I without any surgical response to the war's casualties. German military doctors were traumatized by oral surgery in war due to their previous experience in the Franco-Prussian, Balkan, and Russo-Japanese wars. Photographs taken by the military medical services have revealed the brutal anatomy of oral surgery.

 The principles of oral surgery had not been altered in any of the wars. As the war expanded, oral surgery responded like a battlefield ruse. Obviously, the trauma was to a narrow area of the face, but oral surgery, specializing in a narrow framework, had to respond with an entirely new operation. The treatment of war traumatized jaw fractures applied a combination of surgery and dentistry. Treatment of fractured jaws was handled by orthodontics and dental treatments such as bridges. Orthodontics also required plastic surgery of the face. Facial expressions and masticatory functions were aided. Early orthodontic appliances were replaced by mechanical appliances. 

  However, modern weapons with increased destructiveness no longer caused just simple destruction, but most serious shattering, depending on the impact and distance. In many cases, bone tissue was crushed like pulverized sugar. In many cases, the whole thing was torn apart like rubble. Even when all or most of the mandible was covered with soft tissue, the crushed material went missing. The soft and bony tissues of the wound were accompanied by disfiguring deformities due to their ability to regenerate. The sparse, white bone tissue was gradually covered with soft tissue. The missing areas were formed by grafting, i.e., overplanted bone and soft tissues. The soft tissue damage affected the face and other parts of the disfigured deformity, even after repairing the immediate area of the mouth. 



3/17/2021

Dead bodies lying in Vienna during the Austrian Civil War, also known as the February Uprising. skirmishes between socialist and conservative-fascist forces from 12 to 16 February 1934.

The bodies of civilians murdered by the conservative regime in the February Uprising of the Austrian Civil War lay scattered in Vienna.Between February 12 and 16, 1934, a civil war broke out between the conservative fascist regime forces and the socialist forces. The conservative fascist forces overwhelmed and Australia began to be dominated by state totalitarianism. In terms of casualties, about 1,000 people were killed or wounded by the socialist forces, and about 118 people were killed by the conservative forces. The Austrian army, on the side of the conservative government, entered the war and wiped out the socialist forces.

 In 1932, Engelbert Dorfs became the conservative chancellor and founded the conservative Fatherland Front (VF: VaterländischeFront). With the introduction of Italian fascists, in August 1933, Italy's Mussolini decreed that he would defend the regime of the Fatherland Front. The Fatherland Front gradually reduced civil liberties, banned all movement organizations and political parties, and imprisoned many political prisoners. A new Austro-fascist dictatorship was established. The Fatherland Front regime was determined to dismantle the socialist League for the Protection of the Republic, and a civil war broke out when the League for the Protection of the Republic clashed against a search by the conservative regime's police force at the Hotel Schiff on February 12, 1934. Shootouts broke out between the mutual forces and spilled over to other Austrian cities. Fascist forces crushed the uprising of socialist forces by February 16. Trade unions were banned and socialist forces were suppressed; a constitution was enacted on May 1, establishing a fascist government in Austria.

 The Austrian Nazis assassinated Austrian Chancellor Dolfus on July 25, 1934, and the Nazi dictatorship over other countries broke out. About a dozen Austro-Nazis invaded the chancellor's residence, eliminated the unarmed guards, and assassinated Dolfos. 



3/16/2021

Victims of the interventionists - Peaceful South Vietnamese peasants,Even modern weapons do not save punishers from retribution.

When the U.S. military intervened in the Vietnam War, a large number of peaceful South Vietnamese farmers were involved in the abuse and massacre. The corpses of many Vietnamese farmers lay side by side on the roadside as American soldiers looked on. Not even the latest weaponry could save the victims from the vengeance of war.

 Through the jungles of liberated and occupied territory in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War, the South Vietnamese Liberation Front (Viet Cong) made a slow invasion of the capital Saigon. South Vietnamese Liberation Army soldiers and guerrillas, farmers and laborers in liberated and occupied areas, underground workers in Saigon and other cities, and villages from devastated villages were caught up in the Vietnam War.

 The South Vietnam Liberation Front, operating daily, while the war is ongoing, leaking information on the Vietnamese people, guerrillas, roads, headquarters and other bases to betray their comrades and provide valuable data with the enemy South Vietnamese and American troops. For the future when South Vietnam is liberated, the release of the information must be postponed.

 On July 20, 1954, the Geneva Accords were signed and a temporary border was set up along the Be Hai River at the 17th parallel to create South Vietnam.In the spring of 1955, the pro-American dictator Ngo Dinh Diem overthrew the last legal democratic organization in South Vietnam. In the summer of 1956, when general elections were scheduled, the South Vietnamese authorities, with the active support of the U.S. military, abandoned the peaceful reunification of Vietnam. From 1956 to 1958, abuses and massacres were rampant throughout South Vietnam, including rampant fascist terrorism, gallows, guillotines, mass killings, and concentration camps. On January 17, 1959, an armed uprising began in the Bench Province south of Saigon, marking the beginning of South Vietnam's second resistance conflict. 1960 saw the founding of the South Vietnam Liberation Front.

 In the summer of 1954, the U.S. replaced France and established political control over the puppet regime in South Vietnam. 1956 saw the last French troops leave Saigon. In 1956, the last French troops left Saigon, and the U.S. openly directed the activities of the South Vietnamese puppet regime, which led to the collapse of the Geneva Accords. Behind the Vietnam War were the artillery of battle, the explosions of bombs and shells, the blasts of machine guns, the daring attacks of guerrillas and underground forces in the occupied territories, involving the Vietnamese people in death rather than life.



3/15/2021

In World War I, at the Battle of Iperid, German troops attacked the Allied forces with mustard poisonous gas. Due to poisonous gas poisoning, Allied soldiers had difficulty breathing and fell into a trench and were killed.

In World War I, the Germans attacked the Allied forces with mustard poison gas at the Battle of Iperid. Due to poisoning from the gas, the Allied soldiers had difficulty breathing and collapsed in the trenches and were killed. Mustard gas (also known as Yperite) was first used by the Germans against the Canadians in World War I on July 12, 1917. About 89 Canadian troops died from the poisoning of about 3,500 people.

 Of all the toxic chemicals used during the war, it was the most deadly, almost odorless, and took about 12 hours to take effect. Mustard gas was a very potent poisonous gas, so small amounts added to highly explosive artillery shells increased their killing power. Once in the soil, mustard gas remained active for several weeks. The Germans also used bromine and chloropicrin. Exposure to mustard gas corroded the eyes, skin, and lungs, causing blindness, blistering of the skin, and in severe cases, fatal respiratory damage.

 In all, the Germans used about 68,000 tons of poison gas against Allied soldiers. The Germans used a total of about 68,000 tons of poison gas against Allied troops, far more than the 36,000 tons used by the French and the 25,000 tons used by the British. An estimated 91,198 soldiers died as a result of the poison gas attacks. In addition, about 1.2 million people were hospitalized. The Russian military suffered more than any other armed force, with some 56,000 dead.

 The first stimulant gas attack in World War I was by the French, who fired a tear gas grenade (xylyl bromide) against the Germans in August 1914. In the first unprovoked attack, the Germans dropped chlorine gas on French and Algerian troops at the Second Battle of Ypres on April 22, 1915. Within seconds of inhaling the chlorine gas, the victims had difficulty breathing and suffered asphyxiation attacks. To retaliate, the British dropped chlorine gas on the Germans on September 24, 1915. By 1918, both armies were using filter respirators with charcoal or antidotes.



3/14/2021

British troops moved forward past the dead bodies of three German soldiers and wreck of a medium tank at El Alamein.

In the Second Battle of El Alignment, British troops invaded, passing by the bodies of three slain German soldiers and wrecked tanks scattered across the desert. Allied forces overwhelmed the Germans at El Alayment, about 106 kilometers west of Alexandria, Egypt, from October 23 to November 4, 1942. The Germans withdrew about 2,700 kilometers, their longest retreat in about four months, and attacked and defended the Malet fortress inside Tunisia. On the North African front of World War II, the Battle of El Alamein broke out on the western front in Egypt, bringing the North African front to an end. Axis forces of Italians and Germans were decisively defeated by British troops.

 The North African Front broke out in 1940 when Italian forces invaded Egypt from their colony in Libya. It threatened Britain's strategic assets, the Suez Canal and Persian oil fields. With the Italians defeated, the Germans intervened as Axis forces in the spring of 1941. The Germans achieved amazing results from the beginning of the war, recapturing Libya and threatening Egypt. By late 1941, however, the Germans had overstretched their supply lines and were forced to retreat in the face of British attacks; a reinvigorated Axis force in 1942 overthrew the British at Gazala and captured Tobruk.

 German troops in North Africa joined forces with advancing German troops in the Caucasus, aiming to overrun the entire Middle East. The British army retreated chaotically into Egypt. The British rallied their exhausted forces and the First Battle of El Alamein broke out. Unlike other places in the desert, it became a sea of quicksand and stalemate, impassable to mechanized armies.

 British troops, who had formed a multinational coalition force, began their attack on the night of October 23, 1942, with a massive bombardment. The British forces engaged the Axis forces and wore them down at the expense of the front line. The war of attrition was accompanied by brutal close combat between soldiers on both sides in a whirlwind of heat, noise, and fear. British troops defeated the Axis counterattack. British tanks were wrecked under chaotic mine sources and suffered heavy losses from German anti-tank guns, costing the British army dearly in its advance.



3/13/2021

Loss of hair in child expose to aproximately 175 roentogens of gamma radiation from Hiroshima Atomic Bomb.

When the atomic bomb exploded in the city of Hiroshima, the girl was exposed to about 175 roentgens(R) of gamma rays of radiation. She subsequently suffered from A-bomb sickness with extensive hair loss on her head. After an exposure of about 100 R to 200 R, the usual symptoms of anorexia, malaise, hair loss, diarrhea, and bleeding tendency appeared, but were not as severe. Hair growth resumed about two months later.

 After the bombing of Hiroshima, many citizens suffered from radiation sickness. Sadly, the citizens of Hiroshima did not yet know how to handle radiation exposure. After the explosion of the current bomb, Hiroshima and Nagasaki cities resembled deserts with a few buildings left standing.

 Many Hibakusha who survived the explosion of the atomic bombs died mainly from radiation damage. However, medical personnel considered vomiting and diarrhea to be signs of dysentery and other infectious diseases. The first officially announced victim of radiation sickness was Midori Naka, an actress who survived the explosion of the atomic bomb in Hiroshima City. Afterwards, she began to search for a serious way to treat radiation damage. In the first few days after the tragedy, tens of thousands of people died of severe radiation exposure after the atomic bomb exploded in the city of Hiroshima.

 Those who survived rebuilt their homes again in the same places they had lived before. The radioactive contamination caused many diseases in the survivors of both cities and genetic mutations in children born a little later. Exposure to radiation increased the risk of cancer to have a significant radioactive radiation. In total, about 100,000 survivors participated in the screening. From the information received, it was possible to assess the effects of radiation and to calculate the dose received by each according to the distance from the center of the explosion. Among the survivors who received moderate doses of radiation, cancer occurred in about 10% of cases. Closer to the hypocenter, the oncological risk increased by about 44%. Life expectancy was shortened by about 1.3 years due to exposure to high doses of radiation.

  Exposure of the whole body to radiation doses in the range of about 100 to 250 R causes some disease, but is not fatal. These doses were received in the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, especially at some distance from the hypocenter; of the approximately 250 survivors accidentally exposed to fallout in the Marshall Islands after the detonation of the hydrogen bomb on March 1, 1954, about 64 received radiation doses in the range of about 100 to 250 R. The exposure of the Marshall Islands residents lasted about 45 hours, suggesting that it was not strictly of the acute type, as arbitrarily defined. However, more than half of the radiation doses were received within 24 hours, and the effects were expected from the same amount of acute exposure.

 Illnesses attributed to radiation doses in the range of about 100 to 250 roentgens have a less rapid onset and less prominent symptoms. The overall picture was similar to that of the more heavily exposed cases. Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea are usually seen about the first day after exposure. This was followed by an incubation period of more than two weeks, during which time the patients were free of incapacitating illnesses and able to continue their normal lives. Thereafter, the usual symptoms such as anorexia, malaise, alopecia, diarrhea, and bleeding tendency appear but are not as serious. The change in blood properties associated with radiation injury became more pronounced during the incubation period and persisted for some time. If there are no complications from other trauma or infection, recovery occurs in almost all cases, and hair growth resumes after about two months. In general, the more severe the initial stage of radiation injury, the longer and more difficult it will be. In addition, with antibiotics and proper treatment, recovery of more severe disorders was also expected. 



3/12/2021

Body of a young girl killed during the "curfew" of September 1942, cemetery of the Lodz ghetto.

In the Lodz ghetto, the Nazi Germans massacred a young Jewish girl in September 1942 during the imposition of a "curfew".

 The city of Lodz, located about 120 kilometers southwest of Warsaw, Poland, formed the second largest Jewish settlement in pre-war Poland after Warsaw; the Germans occupied Lodz one week after the German invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939. In early February 1940, the Germans established a ghetto in the northeastern part of Łódź. Some 160,000 Jews, more than a third of the population, were forced into the small area. The Germans isolated the ghetto from the rest of Lodz with barbed wire fences. Special police units guarded the area around the ghetto, and the Jewish ghetto police conducted internal surveillance.

 There was no running water or sewage system in the Lodz ghetto, and living conditions were poor due to hard labor, overcrowding, and starvation. The overwhelming majority of the ghetto's Jews worked in German factories, but received little food from their employers. In 1941-1942, another 40,000 Jews from other parts of the country were forcibly transferred to the Lodz ghetto and confined in isolated building blocks.

 In January 1942, the German military authorities began deporting Jews from Lodz to the Heumno concentration camp, and by the end of September 1942 had deported some 70,000 Jews and 4,300 Roma. In the Heumno concentration camp, a detachment of the Special SS killed Jewish deportees with mobile poison gas trucks. Jews gathered at the ghetto assembly point before deportation. The Germans initially demanded that the Jewish Council compile a list of the deportees. Most of the deported Jews were poor, elderly, children, and women. Since the list alone could not meet the required quotas, the Germans requested a police sting operation. German military personnel shot and killed hundreds of Jews, including children, the elderly, and the sick, during the deportation operation.

 There were no large-scale deportations from Lodz from September 1942 until May 1944, when it was liberated. The ghetto became a forced labor camp; in the spring of 1944, the Nazi Germans decided to purge the Lodz Ghetto. In June and July 1944, the Germans resumed deportations from the Lodz ghetto, and some 70,000 Jews were deported to Chelmno concentration camp. The Germans deported the surviving ghetto Jews to the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination center in August 1944. Approximately 145,000 people in the Lodz Ghetto were massacred in the extermination camp.



3/11/2021

Salvatore Giuliano, an Italian bandit, was assassinated on July 5, 1950 in Castelvetrano, on the western tip of Sicily, Italy.

Salvatore Giuliano, an Italian bandit and criminal, was assassinated on July 5, 1950, in Castelvetrano, on the western tip of Sicily, Italy. He became an outlaw in World War II, attacking only the wealthy with more money. Because of Sicily's bloody mafia tradition, the local peasants became Giuliano's co-conspirators.

 Salvaturi Giulianu was a Sicilian bandit who went dark in World War II after the Allied invasion of Sicily from July 10, 1943. in September 1943, about 70% of Sicily's food supply came from the black market. When he smuggled food into the black market, he shot and killed a police officer who tried to arrest him. Giuliano became an outlaw and led a band of outlaws for most of his life. He became a flamboyant and high-profile criminal, attacking the police at least as often as he was called upon to make arrests. In addition, he became a mastermind of local power in Sicilian politics from 1945 to 1948, including a role in the nominal propaganda of Sicily's separatist movement. He and his bandits were legally responsible for such events as the Portella d'Essi Sinestre massacre. Responsibility for the crimes for the large number of deaths that occurred remained questionable.

 Extensive international coverage left him perplexed by the Italian government. He became the first person to be reported in real time by the modern mass media. Up to about 2,000 police and soldiers were deployed throughout his banditry. He was betrayed by his own people and assassinated on July 5, 1950. This was the last of Robin Hood, the hero of the bandits. He was said to have robbed the rich and given to the poor. Bandits are a criminal group that attacks and loots by violence. However, bandits never loot their relatives in the blood region within their territory, and they strictly punish their relatives according to the blood code. When the kinship society was converted to a modern society, banditry disappeared from local communities. However, when poverty caused by the Great Depression and other factors led to the spread of needy people and the collapse of local communities, violent bandit groups would inevitably arise again. The threat of war leads to the emergence of war-attacking groups for self-defense.



3/10/2021

In Seoul, South Korea, a photographer shot the moment of death by poisoning a girl with cyan for the desire to shoot her dead figures.

A photographer's desire to capture the "dying figure" led him to poison a young woman to capture the moment of her death. The animalistic desire of humans to photograph the dying won out over death. The dying figure is intensely stimulating, most dramatic, and immersive in a religious and mystical world. The sight of many victims dying in war, on the contrary, makes war intensely stimulating, most dramatic, and brings in the light and shade of the religious and mystical. The sight of so many dying, on the contrary, makes war drive the human animal nature into intense stimulation, most exciting, religious and mystical. However, the more powerful people who do not know, do not experience, and do not sacrifice, the more distant they become from death and the more they involve peaceful citizens in war.

 On December 14, 1982, the body of a 24-year-old woman was found in Hoamsan, Guro-gu, Seoul. The deceased was identified as Kim Kyung-gyo, a female employee of a barbershop. The circumstances at the time of discovery led to a presumption of death by poisoning. However, there were no signs of any resistance, and the body had undressed and slumped to the floor and died. The results were extremely contradictory, saying that Kim died after climbing a mountain, daring to take off his clothes, and then he ate the poison and cowered from the floor.

 For the first time in history, the Korean police mobilized profiling methods and the culprit was immediately arrested. The culprit was 42-year-old Lee Dong-hye, a convicted felon who had spent time in prison several times for special theft and was a photographer and boiler plumber after serving his sentence. He was born in Daegu, Gyeongsangbuk-do in 1940, and was orphaned at the age of six when his parents died. He was sent to his uncle's house to finish elementary school and moved to Seoul when he was 14. For about 15 years, he collected discarded scrap iron and other materials, but made a living by cleaning animals. He served time in prison for several special theft charges. After his release from prison, he took up photography as a hobby and spent his time taking pictures of this and that. He was a member of the Korean Photographers' Society and won ten awards in photography contests. He even had his own private exhibition. At a time when his plumbing salary was a few hundred thousand won, he bought an expensive Japanese camera worth about 1.5 million won.

 However, despite the joy of the purchase, he failed to come up with any special ideas for a long time and was not selected in a photography contest. He painstakingly added more exciting ideas to his photos, including life and death, with the intention of making them more exciting. He considered life to death to be the most dramatic and beautiful moment, and took a number of necrophilic photographs of his future wife as a model. He was not satisfied with the staged deaths.

 One day, he climbed a mountain with Kim Kyung-gil, then 24, an employee of his barbershop, saying that he would give her a promotion by taking naked photos of her. Before Kim took off her clothes, he gave her a cold medicine, potassium cyanide medicine, because she was cold. Lee took 21 photos of the moment when Kim took the cyanide poison and died, struggling as he fell to the ground. He continued to take photos even after she died and stopped breathing. While denying his suspicions during the trial after his arrest, he confessed to all the crimes in a fit of rage when the professor of photography who was in charge of analyzing the images testified. On May 27, 1986, Lee was executed at the Seoul Detention Center.



3/09/2021

The dead bodies of German soldiers captured and killed by Soviet troops at the Battle of Moscow were seen in the snow.

On the Eastern Front of World War II, from October 2, 1941 to January 7, 1942, Nazi German and Soviet troops attacked and defended the outskirts of Moscow. German soldiers were captured and killed before Moscow. The black outline of the bodies of fallen German soldiers could be seen in the snowfall. On the battlefield, German soldiers charged and were killed, and fell into the snow. Felt boots were looted and lost from the bodies of many German soldiers who were killed and left for dead. The German soldiers who died in the war were loved by their German mothers and their sons, and their mothers were loved by their sons. However, the sons who became German soldiers were frozen in silence and died in the extreme cold.

 From December 1941 to January 1942, the winter in Moscow was the coldest of the 20th century, reaching about -45°C (-22°F). The fierce Moscow snowfall blew away the bodies of German soldiers. The bodies were blown away as if they had never been there before. The corpses of the German soldiers would only come out again with the sun in the spring. Then there will be a flood of blood in the creek and on the earth. The wheels smashed into the outstretched limbs of the dead German soldiers. From the impact, the dark, rigid corpses lifted a little and came back as hard as a board. People shuddered in the face of this demonic act of terror.

 The Nazi Germans, after several Soviet encirclement and invasion leading to collapse, the Soviets stopped the Germans on the Mozhaysk defensive front, only about 120 km from the capital Moscow. The Wehrmacht, which broke through the Soviet defenses on the Eastern Front, was slowed by weather conditions, and autumn rains turned roads and fields into thick mud, severely hampering German soldiers and vehicles, supplies, etc. The severe cold of 1941-1942 and the freezing of the ground brought the offensive to a halt. The Moscow offensive resulted in approximately 581,000 German and 1,029,234 Soviet casualties.



3/08/2021

The Rape of Belgium was the mistreatment of Belgian,Andenne,civilians by German troops during the invasion and occupation of Belgium during World War I.

In Andenne, Belgium, the massacre of the population began soon after the German occupation on August 20 and continued intermittently during the night. The Germans resorted to machine guns and opened fire. Most of the German soldiers were intoxicated with alcohol. They killed a large number of defenseless civilians and the town collapsed. About 211 people lost their lives in this massacre.

   On the Western Front of World War I, German troops crossed the border of Belgium on August 2, 1914. As soon as the Germans invaded the Belgian territory, German soldiers committed atrocities against civilians, including women and children. From the moment the Germans crossed the Belgian border, murder, rape, arson, and looting broke out. For about the first two weeks of the war, the towns and villages near Liege were the main casualties. The Germans indiscriminately captured and slaughtered a selection of civilians in the villages with little regard for their guilt or innocence. A humane German soldier who witnessed the massacre said, "I am a father myself and I cannot bear this. It's not war, it's butchery," he exclaimed in disgust as the Germans invaded Belgium and northern France in 1914, massacring some 6,000 civilians.

 Fearing the Belgian guerrilla fighters or the French resistance, Frans-Thilaire, the Germans massacred about 156 people in Aarskote and 211 in Andanne in August 1914. In eastern and central Belgium, including Seuil and Taminne, they burned houses and executed about 383 civilians. They also massacred about 674 people in Dinant. In Belgium, a large number of men were captured and forcibly taken by police to places chosen for executions, where they were shot in cold blood without trial or attempted investigation. Victims of the massacre included men, women, and children. The province of Brabant also ordered the elimination of innocent nuns under the pretext that they were spies or men disguised as nuns. In the surrounding area of Aarskot, women were repeatedly the victims of rape between August 19 and September 9, 1941, while the town was recaptured. Rape was almost as latent as murder, live arson, and looting. When army soldiers were ordered or allowed to kill non-combatants on a large scale, a worse ferocity filled the air, and both lust and bloodlust led to massacres on a larger scale. 



3/07/2021

A young partisan was killed while partisan troops were in the process of being near the Lithia Bridge in Greater German Province, falling on his back and scattering his corpse.

Shortly after September 1944, an invasion by partisan troops took place near the fortress of Lithia Bridge within the Greater German zone. While passing through the German garrison, a young partisan was killed by mortar fire and his body tumbled to the grass on his back.

  The Yugoslav Partisans were initially primarily a guerrilla force, but by the second half of World War II, they had developed into a fighting force that participated in conventional combat; by late 1944, they numbered about 650,000 and were massively organized. In April 1945, just before the end of the war, the number exceeded 800,000. The main objective of the partisans was to liberate the land of Yugoslavia from the occupation of Nazi Germany and to create a federal, multi-ethnic communist state in Yugoslavia. The Nazi German occupation forces subjected the local population to severe repression. In the early years of the occupation, the Germans indiscriminately hanged or shot up to about 100 local people, including women, children, and the elderly, for every German soldier killed. For every wounded German soldier, the Germans killed about 50 locals. from 1943, the killing ratio by the Nazi German army was reduced and eliminated in the fall. Partisans enjoyed widespread support in Yugoslavia and became a survival option for many.

 The first partisan uprising broke out in Croatia on June 22, 1941. The first partisan uprising broke out in Croatia on June 22, 1941, followed by a partisan uprising in Serbia about two weeks later, and from June 1941 onwards, after Nazi Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union on the Eastern Front, the partisans conducted guerrilla warfare raids against Nazi German forces occupying Yugoslavia. 



3/06/2021

A 16-year-old man was exposed to the atomic bomb in Nagasaki after the explosion of the Nagasaki atomic bomb, and burns all over his back formed scars.

I was 16 years old when I was exposed to the atomic bomb in Nagasaki City. At the age of 16, I was exposed to the atomic bombing in Nagasaki City and suffered burns all over my back. When he was 16 years old, he was exposed to the atomic bombing in Nagasaki City. This was the upper body of a 40-year-old man with residual sequelae. In the following years, he became an atomic bomb survivor of about 40 years old, with residual burn scars on his back, arms, and even near his ribs.

 With the detonation of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the survivors were burned by the flashes of heat from nuclear fission. They were also burned by fires caused by the explosions, and were involved in mechanical damage caused by collapsed buildings and flying debris. They were subjected to the direct effects of the pressure of the intense blast, i.e., compression in a straight line condition. Significant reddening of the affected skin of the survivor appeared almost immediately and had infiltrated the skin within a few hours. The most characteristic feature of these burns, when viewed after about 50 days, was the sharp injury to the exposed skin area facing the hypocenter. Patients who walked in a direction perpendicular to the line drawn between them and the explosion and whose arms were shaking suggested that they had suffered burns only on the outside and inside of their arms closest to the hypocenter.

 Flash radiation is also accompanied by radiation damage from the instantaneous release of gamma rays and neutrons. Because so many survivors were killed or injured by the multiple effects of the explosion of the atomic bombs, it was not possible to assign precise percentages of casualties to each type of injury. However, the majority of casualties resulted from burns, mechanical injuries, and other causes. It was suggested that about 7% of the fatalities were primarily due to radiation sickness. The largest single factor affecting the incidence of casualties was influenced by the distance of the survivors from the hypocenter. In a study of a randomly selected group of about 900 Hibakusha, total casualties occurred up to about 3.6 km in Hiroshima and about 4.3 km in Nagasaki. The burns were considerably more severe injuries from the outset than any other type of injury, suffering from mechanical injuries far more intense than the effects of radiation. 



3/05/2021

Eleven Paris civilians held hostage in the liberation of Paris were shot to be dead by Nazi German troops at Fort Romainville.

In the liberation of Paris, eleven hostage Parisian civilians were shot to death in the Romanville fortress and their exsanguinated bodies were scattered. The period of the liberation of Paris was littered with all the dead or mowed down by bullets lost in battle, and the last victims of the vengeance of the Nazi German army. Resistance fighters slaughtered at the Château de Vincennes, at Fort Romainville in Luxembourg, about 35 young men whose average age did not exceed 17, became victims of the French Resistance. They were executed on the spot near a waterfall in the Boulogne Forest. Before the battle was completely over, a disastrous sweep by the Nazi German army began. It prioritized civilian soldiers, collaborators, and resistance collaborators for execution. However, on the evening of Saturday, August 26, ordinary Parisians fell asleep with the assurance that tomorrow would surely sing.

 Eleven hostage Parisian civilians in the Liberation of Paris were shot to death in the Fortress of Romanville and their exsanguinated bodies were scattered around. The period of the liberation of Paris was littered with all the dead or mowed down by bullets lost in battle, and the last victims of the vengeance of the Nazi German army. Resistance fighters slaughtered at the Château de Vincennes, at Fort Romainville in Luxembourg, about 35 young men whose average age did not exceed 17, became victims of the French Resistance. They were executed on the spot near a waterfall in the Boulogne Forest. Before the battle was completely over, a disastrous sweep by the Nazi German army began. It prioritized civilian soldiers, collaborators, and resistance collaborators for execution. However, on the evening of Saturday, August 26, ordinary Parisians fell asleep, reassured that tomorrow would surely sing.

 With the invasion of Nazi Germany, Paris fell and surrendered on June 14, 1940. After more than four years of occupation, Paris was liberated by French and American troops on August 25, 1944. The Nazi German commander, Reza, defied Hitler's orders to blow up key Parisian sites and burn the city to the ground before liberating it; he signed a formal surrender on August 26, and American troops marched down the Champs-Elysées on August 26.

 Paris fell when German troops suddenly stormed France starting on June 14, 1940; on June 22, France signed an armistice with the Germans and a French puppet state was established with its capital in Vichy. Elsewhere, however, General Charles de Gaulle's Free France continued to fight, and a resistance emerged in occupied France to resist the Nazis and the Vichy regime's rule.

 French forces were established in London in late 1943 to lead the liberation of Paris during the Allied invasion of France. they arrived in Normandy in August 1944 and joined the American military forces. by August 18, Allied forces were near Paris and resistance fighters emerged from hiding to attack the Germans and the By August 18, Allied troops were near Paris and resistance fighters emerged from hiding to attack German troops and fortresses, and workers in Paris went on strike.

 On August 23, 1944, Allied forces invaded Paris from the north and from the south. Meanwhile, in Paris, Nazi German troops were fighting the resistance and completing the defense of the entire city of Paris. Hitler ordered Paris to be defended to the end and demanded that Paris be a field of ruins and that the Allies not be allowed to cross the original Paris. He began faithfully placing explosives under many of Paris' bridges and its landmarks, but defied orders to detonate and begin the destruction. They were not about to destroy Europe's most famous city, the City of Light.

 American troops encountered the heavy artillery of the Nazi Germans and suffered many casualties. on August 24, they crossed the Seine River and reached the outskirts of Paris. There, the Allied forces were greeted with flowers, kisses, and wine by the frenzied civilian Parisians who surrounded them. More Allied troops invaded, and just before midnight on August 24, American troops captured Hôtel-de-Ville in the heart of Paris.

 On the morning of August 25, American troops swept through the western and eastern parts of Paris, and the city was liberated.

 In the afternoon of August 25, the German commander was arrested by French troops at his headquarters in Paris. Shortly thereafter, he formally surrendered Paris to de Gaulle's provisional government and signed the document. De Gaulle himself arrived on the streets of Paris in the late afternoon of August 25. on August 26, de Gaulle and the French troops led a victorious liberation march down the Champs-Elysées. Sporadic gunfire from rooftops interrupted the parade, but the snipers were never identified. 



Fifteen Vietnamese civilians were killed and four injured by the explosion of a mine on a country road 8 km west of Tuy Hòa, March 18, 1966.A mother became a victim of a landmine explosion and her daughter cried out beside the corpse.

About 15 Vietnamese civilians were killed and four others wounded in a landmine explosion on a rural road about 8 km west of Tuy Hoa in Sout...