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=====Soviet POWs===== Between 1941 and 1944, 91,060 Soviet prisoners of war were captured by the [[Romanian Army]]. Until August 1944, 5,221 Soviet prisoners died in Romanian camps mainly to disease during winter. The POWs were treated according to the 1929 Geneva Convention, which was ratified by Romania on 15 September 1931. Initially, the prisoners were held in five POW camps in [[Vulcan, Brașov|Vulcan]], [[Găești]], [[Drăgășani]], [[Alexandria, Romania|Alexandria]] and [[Slobozia]]. By 1942, the number reached 12 camps of which 10 were in Romania, and two in [[Transnistria Governorate|Transnistria]] at [[Tiraspol]] and [[Odesa]]. As the frontline moved further away, the captured prisoners were given to German POW camps, and then they were transferred to Romanian ones after requests from the Romanian authorities.<ref name="Dutu1">{{cite web|url=https://alesandrudutu.wordpress.com/2015/11/25/prizonieri-de-razboi-sovietici-in-romania-1941-1944/|title=Prizonieri de război sovietici în România (1941–1944)|language=ro|first=Alesandru|last=Duțu|date=25 November 2015}}</ref> [[File:Bess7.JPG|thumb|left|Soviet POWs escorted by a Romanian cavalryman in 1941]] In the winter of 1941/1942, the conditions of the POW camps were unsatisfactory, leading to the deaths of prisoners due to various diseases. The conditions were improved in 1942 when, by order of Marshal [[Ion Antonescu]], the organisations leading the camps were to permanently control how the prisoners were accommodated, cared for, fed, and used. Due to some problems that arose with the food allowance in 1942, it was decided that the prisoners were to be fed like the Romanian troops, with an allocated 30 [[Romanian leu|lei]] per soldier per day.<ref name="Dutu1"/> In accordance with Article 27 of the Geneva Convention, the POWs were used in various productive activities. In return for providing work, the prisoners were granted payment and accommodation, as well as free time for cleaning, rest, and religious or other activities by their employers, according to the contracts signed with the commanders of the prison camps. The main workplaces for prisoners were in agriculture and industrial enterprises, but also in forestry, civil works, and in service of the POW camps.<ref name="Dutu1"/> For correspondence with their families, the prisoners were provided with postcards. However, most of these were not used as the POWs feared reprisals from the Soviet authorities upon learning that they were prisoners in Romania. The punishment of POWs in the Romanian camps was applied following the regulations of the Romanian Army. Executions by firing squad were few. The escapees who were caught and did not commit any acts of sabotage or espionage were tried by [[court-martial]] and sentenced to prison terms from 3–6 months to several years. After 23 August 1944, the Soviet POWs were handed over to the Soviet headquarters.<ref name="Dutu1"/>
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