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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Turkish Prisoners in Egypt, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Turkish Prisoners in Egypt
+ A Report By The Delegates Of The International Committee
+ Of The Red Cross
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: January 4, 2004 [EBook #10589]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TURKISH PRISONERS IN EGYPT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Susan Woodring and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+TURKISH PRISONERS IN EGYPT
+
+A Report By The Delegates Of The International Committee Of The Red
+Cross
+
+_Extracted and translated from the Official Reports of the Red Cross
+Society_
+
+_(Documents publiés à l'occasion de la Guerre Européenne, 1914-1917)_
+
+Published in 1917
+
+
+
+
+_A Report on a visit made in December, 1916, and January, 1917, to the
+Camps for Turkish Prisoners of War in Egypt, by the Delegates of the
+International Committee of the Red Cross._
+
+
+
+
+Turkish Prisoners in Egypt
+
+~INTRODUCTION~
+
+
+Being deputed by the Red Cross International Committee to visit Turkish
+prisoners of war in Egypt, we presented ourselves on December 3, 1916,
+to the officer for Naval Transport in the British office at Marseilles.
+By order of the War Office he obtained berths for us on the liner
+_Morea_, of the P. and O. Line. We embarked at Marseilles on December
+19, 1916, and after an uneventful journey reached Port Said on December
+27.
+
+At Cairo General Murray, Commander-in-Chief of the British forces in
+Egypt, was good enough to put us in touch with Brig.-General II. G.
+Casson, C.M.G., Director-in-Chief of the Prisoners of War Department.
+With the help of Colonel Simpson we drew up a programme of visits. A
+motor-car was placed at our disposal, and permission given us to take
+photographs in the camps, distribute gifts among the prisoners, and
+talk freely with them.
+
+We have to express our warmest thanks to General Murray and to the
+officers who allowed us to make our enquiries everywhere, without
+restriction. We should also like to offer our deepest gratitude to Sir
+Reginald Wingate, British High Commissioner in Egypt, for the kindly
+care accorded us throughout our stay.
+
+
+
+
+~1. Heliopolis Camp.~
+
+_(Visited on January 2, 1917.)_
+
+
+This camp is laid out quite close to the new city of hotels and villas
+founded in 1905 under the name of The Oasis of Heliopolis. The camp site
+is 134 feet above the level of Cairo.
+
+
+_Strength._--3,906 Turkish non-commissioned officers and men.
+
+3 Turkish soldiers of the Sanitary Corps.
+
+2 Armenian doctors (officers in the Turkish Army).
+
+The camp is arranged to hold a total population of 15,000 men. A
+barbed-wire fencing separates it from adjoining property.
+
+
+_Accommodation._--The barracks for the prisoners are arranged in groups,
+in parallel lines separated by passages 65 feet wide. These barracks,
+built under the supervision of the Egyptian Engineering Department, are
+of uniform construction, and about 42 feet long by 30 feet wide. They
+are solid frames of wood with the spaces between filled in with reeds
+arranged vertically and held in place by crossbars. The roof is of reed
+thatch edged with tarred felt. Thanks to the design, the ventilation is
+perfect. The sandy soil shows hardly a sign of dampness. The passage
+between the rows of beds is made of hard-beaten earth which is very dry
+and easily kept clean. All along this corridor, as in all the camp
+roads, buckets full of water are arranged in readiness to meet an
+outbreak of fire. The water in these buckets is not meant for drinking,
+and therefore contains a little cresol to prevent prisoners drinking it.
+The danger of fire is further reduced to a minimum by the fact that the
+men smoke only out of doors and that the mildness of the climate does
+away with the use of stoves. Each barrack accommodates 50 men.
+
+
+_Bedding._--Each prisoner lies on a mat of plaited rush, and has four
+blankets. Every morning the mats are brushed and rolled up and the
+blankets folded, so that during the day there is a large clear space
+inside the building. The detention cells have the same sleeping
+accommodation.
+
+
+_Exercise._--The space left between the barracks of the separate
+sections is amply sufficient for exercise, which is quite unrestricted
+during the regulation hours.
+
+
+_Food._--Provisions are purchased by the commissariat and brought every
+morning into a special barrack, whence each section draws its daily
+rations. Bread comes from the Cairo bakeries. It is of good quality and
+agreeable to the taste. The kitchens are in the open and heated by wood
+fires. They are staffed by a detachment of prisoners under a head cook.
+At meal times each section sends men to draw the rations for each room
+in large metal bowls. Every man has his own spoon, bowl and drinking
+cup, all of metal. The hours of meals are ordinarily as follows:
+
+ 5 a.m.; 11 a.m.; and 4 p.m.
+
+The last meal is the principal one of the day.
+
+We have examined the various food materials given the prisoners and
+found them to be of excellent quality.
+
+The menu of the Turkish prisoners of war now interned in Heliopolis Camp
+consists of bread, meat, vegetables, rice, butter, pepper, salt, onions,
+tea (7-1/2 grammes), sugar (42 grammes), cheese and jam or olives.
+
+Each prisoner receives 42-1/2 grammes of cigarettes and two boxes of
+matches every week; two lbs. of firewood per day; and soap.
+
+It interested us to make a note of the expenses involved by the support
+of each Turkish prisoner, according to figures supplied by the English
+authorities.
+
+The calculation is based on a period of six months (in winter).
+
+ £ s. d.
+ Clothing and linen 3 0 0
+ Periodical renovation of winter
+ clothes 0 6 6
+ Renovation of linen, footwear,
+ and towels (twice) 1 10 0
+ Food at actual contract prices 5 0 0
+ Tobacco 0 12 6
+ Wood (average price) 0 7 6
+ Lighting (as for Maadi Camp) 0 2 0
+ Water filtration (Maadi) 0 0 6
+ -------------
+ Total £10 19 0
+ =============
+
+Depreciation of buildings, fittings, blankets and other things provided
+is not included in these figures.
+
+
+_Canteen._--The regulation food of the prisoners being ample, the
+canteen plays a very minor part in the feeding arrangements. It sells
+tea, coffee, and light refreshments. A cup of sweetened tea costs 5
+paras, or about one-third of a penny. The canteen also deals in letter
+paper, post-cards, thread, needles, buttons and other small odds and
+ends.
+
+The men receive 2 ounces of tobacco free every week. They never get
+alcohol.
+
+
+_Clothing._--Each prisoner is supplied with two complete sets of
+underwear: shirts, drawers, and socks. The uniform consists of trousers
+and coat of dark blue cloth. The brass buttons give it a military
+appearance.
+
+All the men wear the red fez. They are allowed to wear their
+decorations. That they are prisoners is shown only by their having on
+them a white metal plate about 1-1/2 inches in diameter, bearing a
+registration number and the two letters P.W. (Prisoner of War). In our
+opinion this kind of medallion is a more judicious form of indication
+than the bands, armlets or large letters used elsewhere. In summer the
+cloth uniforms are replaced by linen uniforms of the same cut and
+colour.
+
+All men wear indoors leather slippers of the Eastern kind. Shoes are
+used only by prisoners engaged on gardening, and by non-commissioned
+officers.
+
+Linen, clothes and footwear are renewed on fixed dates or according to
+need.
+
+
+_Hygiene._--Everything that has to do with hygiene and the sanitation of
+the camp is the province of Lieut.-Colonel E.G. Garner, Medical Office
+Inspector of Prisoner-of-War Camps in Egypt.
+
+Water is supplied from the Heliopolis town mains, is of good quality,
+and is provided in sufficient quantities.
+
+For toilet purposes the prisoners have the use twice a day of shower
+baths and water taps. The floor of the lavatories is sloping cement, and
+the water drains away through a gulley between the two rows of baths.
+Prisoners can get hot water from the kitchen when they need it. Soap is
+supplied _ad libitum_.
+
+For washing their clothes the prisoners have some very convenient
+arrangements. Once a week each prisoner's blankets and clothes are
+passed through the disinfecting chamber and thoroughly sterilised.
+Thanks to this precaution, there is not a trace of vermin to be found in
+the camp.
+
+Ten Turkish barbers are occupied in cutting the hair of prisoners and
+shaving them in a well-managed barber's shop.
+
+The latrines are clean and numerous enough. Some of them are on the
+English system; the rest on the Turkish. They are disinfected daily with
+carbolineum. All discharge into the sewers.
+
+
+_Medical attention._--The camp medical service is staffed by Colonel
+E.G. Garner and two Armenian doctors (Arsen Khoren and Léon Samuel).
+Four English hospital orderlies are assisted by three Turkish orderlies.
+An English dentist visits the camp at the doctor's request.
+
+At the infirmary, which is clean and well looked after, all prisoners
+not seriously ill are accommodated with beds having mattresses and steel
+springs. The consulting room is well supplied with medicines. Serious
+cases are sent to the hospitals set apart for prisoners of war.
+
+From 20 to 30 men come to the infirmary daily for medical attention. All
+the cases are entered in a register, which we have examined; after each
+name is the complaint and the treatment prescribed.
+
+At the time of our visit there were six lying-down cases in the
+infirmary; two with tuberculosis in the first stage (prisoners captured
+recently at El Arish); one with diarrhoea; one with conjunctivitis; one
+with malaria; and one with a wounded leg.
+
+Of the prisoners in camp 3 per cent. have been attacked by malaria--old
+cases from the marshy districts of Turkey, such as Angora Yosgath, for
+instance. Nine per cent. have been attacked by chronic bacillar
+dysentery; these are treated periodically with anti-dysenteric serum.
+Some cases of amibian dysentery are being treated with calomel, salol,
+and emetine. Twenty per cent. were affected by ophthalmia due to their
+stay in the desert before being captured. These were treated with
+sulphate of zinc and protargol.
+
+Four prisoners are suffering from trachoma of old standing. Recent cases
+are ordinary ailments, bronchitis and simple diarrhoea.
+
+As a general rule the camp prisoners look well, have a good colour and
+are well nourished.
+
+The prisoners were inoculated in Turkey against typhoid fever and
+smallpox. All who no longer showed traces of vaccination were vaccinated
+immediately after being captured. They were also inoculated against
+cholera.
+
+There is no typhoid fever in the camp, nor exanthematic typhus, nor any
+other infectious disease.
+
+
+_Work._--The prisoners have no regular work to do. No prisoner is
+employed in workshops outside the camp. Even inside, except for ordinary
+camp fatigue duties, and some light gardening, no labour is exacted.
+During our inspection we saw the digging for a water supply through the
+camp being done by Arab workmen, not by prisoners.
+
+In any case, corporals and sergeants are not allowed to work.
+
+
+_Religion and Recreation._--The prisoners are quite free to follow their
+own religious practices, which are performed thrice a day ordinarily,
+and six or seven times daily during Ramadan. Music and singing are
+permitted; prisoners have manufactured several guitars and violins.
+
+
+_Correspondence._--Most of the prisoners brought money with them; some
+have received sums of money from their families through the Turkish Red
+Cross and the International Committee of the Red Cross. They receive the
+amount in weekly instalments of 30 piastres (about 6 shillings) per
+month. Each person has a separate current account with the camp
+accountant.
+
+Letters take from three weeks to three months to get from the sender to
+the prisoner to whom they are addressed. Some of them are sent through
+the American Consul at Cairo. Very few of the prisoners can write, but
+these may do so as often and for as long as they wish. There is no
+system of delaying correspondence after delivery or before despatch.
+
+
+_Prisoners' Aid._--There is no relief committee in the camp; so far, no
+general relief funds have been sent. Sergeant-Major Hussein Hissan, a
+native of Constantinople, told us that, although there were many poor
+prisoners in the camp, there was no need to send help, as all prisoners
+are well fed, well clothed and supplied with tobacco.
+
+
+_Prisoners' Behaviour._--What strikes one more than anything else on
+entering the camp is the prevailing orderliness and cleanliness. A
+Turkish sergeant-major commands each group of huts, and a Turkish
+sergeant is responsible for each dormitory. The prisoners are smart,
+give the military salute and come to attention at the orders of the
+non-commissioned officers when those in command pass through the camp.
+
+Sergeant-Major Hassar Mohammed, from Angora, and Hamid Abdallah, from
+Koniah (Asia Minor), told us, on behalf of their fellow prisoners, that
+they had no complaints to make, and assured us of the kind treatment
+which they receive.
+
+On their part, the English officers and non-commissioned officers
+declared that the prisoners are well disciplined and very willing. In
+short, we took away with us an excellent impression of Heliopolis Camp.
+
+
+
+
+~2. Hospital No. 2, at Abbassiah, near Cairo.~
+
+_(Visited on January 2, 1917.)_
+
+
+This hospital, on the pavilion system, and arranged in accordance with
+the requirements of modern practice, is reserved exclusively for
+German, Austrian, Bulgarian and Turkish prisoners of war. It is staffed
+by head doctor Wickermann, assisted by four English doctors. Some
+English Red Cross nurses and 18 Turkish orderlies attend to the sick and
+wounded. These nurses and orderlies are engaged only with treatment. The
+rough ward work and cleaning are done by native employés. The pavilions
+are built of stone and separated by intervals of 32-1/2 feet. The roofs
+are of cement. Along one side runs a covered gallery wherein beds and
+arm-chairs are placed for the open-air cure of patients for whom it is
+prescribed. The floor of the pavilions is a kind of linoleum made of
+sawdust and cement, and is covered with palm mats. The windows are
+large, and the cubic space per patient ample. The beds are arranged in
+two rows and have spring and stuffed mattresses. Blankets are not
+stinted. The rooms are scrupulously clean; and the hospital sterilising
+chamber serves to disinfect the clothes, which, after being washed and
+labelled, are stored in a wardrobe and handed back to the owners when
+they leave the hospital. The prisoners have no trouble over them. A
+large supply of things for the patients is kept in the laundry.
+
+
+_Clothing._--The hospital patients wear pyjamas like those of British
+soldiers; and, like the latter, convalescents wear a bright blue suit
+with white facings and a red necktie. Patients able to sit up have
+folding easy-chairs at their disposal.
+
+
+_Dressings._--The hospital drug department is well stocked. The wounded
+are supplied with surgical appliances, and with artificial limbs of the
+most perfect make.
+
+The day before our visit 80 wounded prisoners arrived at the hospital
+from El Arish in an exhausted and emaciated condition. We saw each case
+receive the most suitable treatment. The apparatus most generally used
+for dealing with fractures consists of a metal frame with flannel strips
+stretched from side to side to form a kind of trough. When the broken
+limb is in position the apparatus is suspended from the ceiling by means
+of pulleys. We have never seen this ingenious arrangement in any German
+or French hospital; it seems to us to be a very practical idea and
+likely to prove of great benefit to the wounded. At the head of each bed
+is a temperature chart, a diet chart, and a clinical summary of the
+case.
+
+
+_Special Quarters._--The operating theatre is well arranged; a
+sterilising stove is heated by paraffin. In the wards for prisoners
+suffering from malaria the beds are enclosed by mosquito nets to prevent
+the _anopheles_ mosquito infecting itself and then biting other patients
+or people of the neighbourhood. Two wards are kept for convalescent
+cases, who have a dining-room to stay in during the day.
+
+Cases of venereal disease are also confined to separate premises.
+
+The orderlies live in two comfortable tents in the hospital garden, one
+of which, is occupied by those on day duty, the other by those on night
+duty.
+
+
+_Hygiene._--The water is of good quality, supplied from the Cairo water
+system. The prisoners can use the well-equipped hot and cold baths at
+their pleasure. Invalids wash themselves, or are washed with the aid of
+bowls. Convalescents wash at the taps supplied for their use.
+
+The latrines are on the Turkish plan, with automatic water-flush, and
+discharge into the town drainage.
+
+
+_Food._--The hospital management employs a contractor to do the
+provisioning. The food is prepared in the kitchen by 4 Egyptian
+employés. The dietary of the Turkish soldiers differs somewhat from that
+of the German and Austrian prisoners, in order to suit the palates of
+each. For example, the Turks prefer flat loaves, which are baked for
+them; while European prisoners get what is called English bread,
+toasted. Bulgarian curdled milk is prepared for dysentery patients, and
+the English doctors testify to its good effects.
+
+An ice-box in each pavilion keeps such provisions as must stay there
+quite fresh. The diet for invalids is divided into full diet and milk
+diet.
+
+1. FULL DIET.
+ _Breakfast_: Bread; milk.
+ _Lunch_: Meat stew; vegetables; rice; bread.
+ _Supper_: Bread; soup; rice; milk.
+ _Extra, when ordered_: Chicken; pigeon; rabbit; butchers'
+ meat; lemons; eggs; cheese; curdled milk.
+
+2. MILK DIET.
+ _Breakfast_: Bread; milk.
+ _Lunch_: Soup; bread; milk; rice.
+ _Supper_: Bread; milk; sugar.
+
+The quantities of food allowed to invalids are given below:
+
+ _Diet for
+ _Ordinary _Milk Fever
+ Diet. Diet. Patients.
+ grm._ grm._ grm._
+
+ Native bread (baladi) 937 625
+ Beef 115 100
+ Vegetables 120
+ Rice 115 50
+ Milk 200 800 1,200
+ Fat 20
+ Sugar 20 25
+ Salt 15 5
+ Pepper 3 1
+ Onions 20
+ Tomatoes 10
+
+We examined all these provisions and found them to be excellent in
+quality.
+
+
+_Sickness._--Sick prisoners are transferred from the camps to the
+hospital in specially fitted motor vehicles. The English doctors without
+exception praise the patience and brave endurance of pain shown by the
+Turkish prisoners. The cases treated in the hospital up to January 2,
+1917, the date of our visit, are analysed below.
+
+ Turks Bulgarians Germans
+ Tuberculosis 27 0 0
+ Bacillar dysentery 37 3 2
+ Malaria 3 0 0
+ War wounds 74 2 4
+ Anaemia and weakness 30 12 5
+ Various 96 5 0
+ --- --- ---
+ Totals 267 22 11
+ === === ===
+
+There is no epidemic disease in the hospital.
+
+
+_Deaths._--Sixty-six Turkish prisoners died in the Abbassiah hospital
+between August 8, 1916, and January 1, 1917.
+
+ From Dysentery 45
+ " Tuberculosis 9
+ " Beri-beri 1
+ " Malaria 1
+ " War wounds 9
+ " Typhoid fever 1
+ ---
+ 66
+ ===
+
+In addition, one German prisoner died of pneumonia. As regards deaths
+from dysentery, most of the prisoners attacked by the disease came from
+the Hedjaz, and were in a seriously weak and exhausted condition.
+
+Turkish prisoners are prepared for burial in the manner prescribed by
+their religion. They are buried in a Moslem cemetery. British soldiers
+from the garrison pay them the last honours, and the prisoners are
+represented at the cemetery.
+
+
+
+
+~3. Maadi Camp.~
+
+_(Visited on January 3, 1917.)_
+
+
+The chief camp at Maadi is 9-1/3 miles south of Cairo, on the right bank
+of the Nile. All prisoners are taken to it after capture, and thence
+distributed among the other camps in Egypt.
+
+
+_Strength._--Five thousand five hundred and fifty-six Turkish
+non-commissioned officers and men, including 1,200 men recently captured
+at El Arish in the Sinai peninsula.
+
+No officers are interned in this camp. Three imaums (priests) were not
+classed with the officers, as they had served as privates.
+
+The prisoners include--besides Turks--Arabs, Armenians, Greeks, Jews
+from Palestine and Mesopotamia, and some Senoussi. Only a small number
+have been captives ever since the beginning of the war; a large
+proportion come from Gallipoli. We found among the prisoners a boy 8
+years old, named Abd-el-Mohsen, who lives in camp with his father.
+
+The camp is divided into 41 sections and 4 quarters. The last are
+divided off from one another by barbed wire fences.
+
+
+_Accommodation._--The quarters of the Turkish prisoners in Maadi Camp
+include: (1) Old buildings originally erected as a school of music and
+subsequently used as a factory; (2) barracks built recently for
+prisoners of war.
+
+The first consist chiefly of a huge hall 252 feet long and 49 feet wide,
+with many large openings in the walls. The roof, of match-boarding, is
+33 feet above the floor. Standpipes are fixed all along the hall. There
+are, in addition, some out-buildings used by the management and as
+stores.
+
+In the other camp sections new barracks, measuring as a rule 100 by 39
+feet, were erected by a building firm. Walls and roof are of wood and
+thatch; the floor is hard-beaten earth. All camp quarters are well open
+to the air, so that proper ventilation presents no difficulties.
+
+
+_Sleeping Accommodation._--Lengthwise of all the quarters run platforms
+of beaten earth, 6-1/2 feet wide, and 9 inches above the floor. On these
+are placed the woven rush mats which serve for beds. Each prisoner has 3
+blankets. During the season when the temperature falls appreciably at
+night extra blankets are served out. All bedding is cleaned and
+disinfected at regular intervals. Shelves whereon the prisoners can keep
+their belongings are fixed between the rows of beds.
+
+
+_Food._--The food of the prisoners of war is according to the scale
+already given. Kitchens are provided in each section and staffed by the
+prisoners themselves. We tasted the soup and meat stew, and found them
+of good quality and very appetising. The prisoners receive _baladi_ or
+native bread, which resembles their usual food and is supplied by Cairo
+bakeries. We questioned many of the men, who assured us that they were
+satisfied with the food. The only complaint noted by us was that of a
+man who thought that he got rice too often. A small canteen supplies
+black coffee, sweetened, at a farthing per cup. It is run as a private
+concern under the supervision of the authorities. Tobacco is
+distributed every Thursday on the scale mentioned previously.
+
+
+_Clothing._--Soon after their arrival in camp the prisoners were taken
+to a large courtyard, in which they stripped off all their clothes and
+foot-gear. As a health precaution all this stuff was scrapped and
+destroyed. After being disinfected, the men received a complete new
+outfit consisting of two pairs of drawers and two flannel shirts, a
+cholera belt, socks, a pair of trousers and a dark blue cloth tunic with
+linen lining and uniform buttons, and a red fez. Leather slippers for
+privates and shoes for sergeants and corporals complete the outfit, the
+smartness of which leaves nothing to be desired. Although on the day of
+our visit the thermometer stood at about 53°F. many of the men were also
+wearing their thick cloth overcoats. Every prisoner has fastened in his
+tunic a small metal plate bearing his registration number.
+Non-commissioned officers are distinguished by a white linen armlet,
+crossed by a blue band for corporals, and by a red band for sergeants.
+The sergeant-major wears a red armlet.
+
+
+_Hygiene._--The drinking-water used in camp is drawn by two steam pumps
+from a well sunk to a great depth close to the Nile. The Nile water,
+after passing through a kind of natural filter, is thus lifted into a
+reservoir above the camp, and is distributed in all directions by
+gravity. The bacteriological analysis made every week when the supply
+was first opened--now once a month--showed the water to be perfectly
+pure.
+
+Water for washing purposes is plentiful. Hot and cold shower-baths are
+installed throughout the camp. The prisoners are obliged to use them
+once a week, but may, if they choose, have a bath four times a day. In
+summer especially the baths are never idle.
+
+Prisoners get plenty of soap and wash their own linen on wooden tables
+arranged under water taps.
+
+Two high-pressure steam disinfecting chambers serve the camp, and once a
+week all blankets are passed through them. The camp contains no fleas,
+lice, or bugs.
+
+The day latrines are 100 yards from the living quarters. They are of the
+Turkish kind, with movable tubs--1 tub for every 10 men. Every tub
+contains some cresol solution. The night-soil is removed daily by the
+Cairo road authorities and converted into manure. Some latrines close to
+the barracks are kept for night use and are locked up during the day.
+
+
+_Medical Attention._--The medical service of Maadi Camp is in the hands
+of head-doctor Captain Scrimgeour, who in time of peace practised in
+Nazareth. He is assisted by an English doctor-adjutant, and 4 Arab
+doctors, natives of Syria. All these doctors speak Turkish and Arabic.
+Nine English orderlies and 12 Turkish orderlies carry out the sick
+duties. A dentist comes to camp when required.
+
+The infirmary included three well-appointed quarters built in masonry,
+and able to hold 40 patients.
+
+The infirmary bedding accommodation consists of iron bedsteads with
+spring mattress and stuffed mattress. The blankets are warm and
+unlimited in number.
+
+
+_Illness._--Every morning 300-400 prisoners come on sick parade. This
+number represents about 8 per cent. of the strength. Although these men
+often come to be treated for trifling ailments, such as slight
+constipation, or even a small boil, the doctors make it a rule not to
+prevent anyone going sick, as this course enables them to keep the
+closer watch upon the health of the camp.
+
+On the occasion of our visit there were in the infirmary 7 men laid up:
+1 with itch, 1 with diarrhoea, 1 with neuralgia, 1 with an abscess in
+the neck, 1 with articular rheumatism, and 1 with gastritis. A prisoner
+who had been trepanned by the doctors on account of damage done to his
+skull before his capture, was gradually recovering the power of motion
+and his normal sensibility.
+
+Since the camp was opened there have been 35 cases of tertian ague, all
+from the Hedjaz, Mecca, Taïf and Jeddah; but no case of aggravated
+malaria. Eleven cases of tuberculosis were sent into the Egyptian Red
+Cross hospitals and to that at Abbassiah. Six cases of trachoma are now
+undergoing treatment with applications of protargol. In summer there
+have been a few cases of ordinary diarrhoea. The camp has not suffered
+from dysentery, typhoid, typhus, nor any other epidemic disease.
+
+All prisoners are inoculated against smallpox, typhoid and cholera.
+
+
+_The Severely Wounded and those who have lost Limbs._--A special
+quarter of the camp contains 55 men who have lost limbs in the war. They
+are provided with the most perfect prothesis apparatus, jointed
+artificial limbs. Among them are 2 blind men. Sixty other wounded who
+have escaped more lightly suffer from stiffness of the joints, ankylosis
+and atrophy. They are well provided with sticks and crutches.
+
+
+_Deaths._--Two aged prisoners have died in the camp, both from apoplexy.
+They were interred with military honours in the Moslem burial-ground
+nearest to the camp.
+
+
+_Exercise._--No limit is placed upon the time during which exercise may
+be taken in the open space round the barracks.
+
+
+_Work._--The prisoners have not to do work. Several attempts have been
+made to teach them boot-making, but their results were so unpromising
+that they were given up. Although there are many agriculturists among
+the prisoners, it would not do to use them for work on the land along
+with the natives, owing to the ease with which they could escape and the
+need for having many soldiers to guard them. However, for some weeks
+past the camp commandant has made trial of using some prisoners for
+market gardening on lands beside the Nile, just outside the camp.
+
+
+_Discipline._--Under the head of discipline there are hardly any
+complaints to make, and punishment has rarely had to be inflicted. One
+case of escape was punished with three months' imprisonment without any
+alteration in diet. Only tobacco was cut off. An old offender was
+brought before a court-martial, and sentenced by it to six months'
+imprisonment. The prison quarters are cells built entirely of cement,
+with two barred windows well above the ground to light the chamber,
+which is of ample size.
+
+
+_Right to Make Complaints._--The camp commandant makes a general
+inspection every day. Every prisoner has the right to step forward and
+make his complaints. The commandant converses with the prisoners through
+the medium of several British officers who speak Arabic and Turkish.
+Moreover, the prisoners have the right of appeal to the
+Commander-in-Chief and to Brig.-General Casson, who often make tours of
+inspection through the camps.
+
+
+_Religion._--The prisoners have every opportunity for practising their
+religious observances. For the Mahometans a small mosque has been built,
+round which they spread their praying carpets. Some of them read the
+Koran regularly; others seem indifferent. Despite differences of race,
+origin, and even of religion, good-feeling prevails among the prisoners
+and quarrels are very few in number.
+
+
+_Games and Recreations._--As regards games and recreations, the
+prisoners are interested only in wrestling, cards and dominoes. They
+have been introduced to football without success. Some have shown great
+skill in the manufacture of mandolines, guitars, and tambourines. All
+materials as well as games are provided gratis by the British
+Government. The camp commandant has bought the men some gramophones.
+Many prisoners make articles of coloured beads--handbags, purses,
+necklaces, bracelets, etc.--which show considerable artistic taste. We
+bought one of these beautiful pieces of work as a specimen. The articles
+sell readily in the curiosity shops at Cairo. One section of 1,200
+prisoners netted from the sales a sum of 2,500 francs in a fortnight.
+
+
+_Correspondence._--Most of the prisoners receive very few letters or
+none. They are allowed to write in their language once a fortnight, but
+take very little advantage of the permission. It seems that many letters
+addressed to their families in Turkey come back again, as the addressee
+has not been found. Some Turks captured near Bagdad and transported to
+Burmah received their money from home, but have not received any more
+during the one or two months that have elapsed since they were
+transferred to Maadi. It is probable that the money was sent home again,
+or forwarded officially to the new place of internment, and this takes a
+long time. Several prisoners have taken advantage of their captivity to
+learn reading and writing with their comrades' assistance. Many men had
+money on them when they were taken. This money is lodged, and handed to
+them at demand in monthly payments. Many soldiers have received money
+orders from their families through the International Committee of the
+Red Cross. Parcels, which are seldom received, are opened in the
+presence of the addressee. Only knives are confiscated.
+
+
+_Help for Prisoners._--Leaving out of consideration the wish expressed
+by some men to have a little money for buying extra tobacco and coffee,
+we are satisfied that there are no needy persons in the camp at Maadi.
+
+
+_Mentality._--The many questions which we have asked show that there is
+no dissatisfaction among the prisoners with regard to the treatment they
+receive. Prisoners have mentioned to us chiefly their anxiety about
+their families, of whom they have no news. The Armenian clergy at Cairo
+look after their fellow-countrymen.
+
+
+
+
+~4. The Egyptian Red Cross Hospital at Cairo~.
+
+_(Visited on January 4, 1917.)_
+
+
+The Egyptian Red Cross, under the presidency of His Highness Prince Fuad
+Pasha, being anxious to help its co-religionists, founded in March,
+1915, a hospital for sick and wounded prisoners of war. This hospital is
+under the sole management of the Turkish Red Cross, which is in touch
+with the British authorities through Dr. Keatinge, Professor of the
+Faculty of Medicine at Cairo.
+
+
+_Sanitary Staff._--All the hospital doctors are Egyptian. In addition to
+the doctor-in-chief, Dr. Abbas Bey Helmey, two doctors, three surgeons,
+and one druggist live in the hospital.
+
+Consulting doctors come from the town when sent for to treat nose, ear
+and eye troubles. A Cairo specialist also places his X-ray apparatus at
+the service of the hospital patients. The matron is an American, and has
+three English nurses under her.
+
+Thirty-two orderlies do the ward work.
+
+
+_Accommodation._--The Egyptian Red Cross Hospital is installed in an old
+palace of Omar-Pasha Lufti, situated in a large garden, which is very
+shady and well kept. The dimensions of the wards assure easy circulation
+of air and perfect ventilation. As the building was not designed to
+serve its present purpose, the various staffs are somewhat scattered,
+but this difficulty has been got over in a most practical manner. A huge
+corridor gives communication between the wards, which are usually 23
+feet square and 26 feet high. The large wards considerably exceed these
+measurements, and their tasteful decoration gives them a characteristic
+style. On the first floor, the rooms for the consumptive patients
+measure 16 by 16 by 13 feet--a very good cubical allowance for the four
+beds in each. The floor is of large flag-stones. Most of the rooms
+command the garden and a courtyard planted with trees. The building
+occupied by the guard is quite separate from the hospital. Electricity
+is used throughout the buildings.
+
+
+_Bedding._--The iron bedsteads, painted with white ripolin, are
+separated from one another by pedestal tables. The spring mattress,
+stuffed mattress, sheets and pillows are in very sound condition. There
+is no limit set to the number of blankets allowed. The beds are covered
+with pretty blue and white quilts, with the Red Cross in the middle.
+This quite recent innovation has a very pretty effect.
+
+
+_Food._--The commissariat is arranged by contract with a head cook. The
+menus are drawn up by the doctors according to the diet prescribed. We
+tasted the day's food and found it excellent. All provisions examined by
+us were of good quality and carefully overlooked. The kitchen, with its
+well-fitted ranges and polished utensils, struck us favourably. The
+cooking and attendance is done by persons engaged by the chef.
+
+Each man is provided with two bowls of tinned copper and a drinking cup.
+All invalids get sweetened tea twice a day. Officers may choose tea or
+coffee. The following is the hospital dietary:
+
+FOR OFFICERS.
+ _Breakfast_: European bread; fresh milk; 3 eggs; tea; coffee.
+ _Lunch_: Mutton; two dishes of vegetables, or macaroni rice;
+ salad; rice pudding; coffee; fruit.
+ _Dinner_: The same as lunch, but without fruit.
+
+ORDINARY DIET.
+ _Breakfast_: Arab bread; sweetened fresh milk.
+ _Lunch_: Arab bread; beef; rice, vegetables.
+ _Dinner_: Arab bread; rice soup; rice pudding.
+
+MILK DIET.
+ _Breakfast_: Bread, 350 grm.; sweetened milk.
+ _Lunch_: Arab bread; soup; beef-tea; rice pudding.
+ _Dinner_: Bread, 350 grm.; sweetened milk.
+
+FEVER DIET.
+ _Breakfast_: Milk, 400 grm., without sugar.
+ _Lunch_: 400 grm. of milk without sugar.
+ _Dinner_: 400 grm. of milk without sugar.
+
+On Sunday and Thursday mutton is replaced by game. On the same two days
+a course of sweetened rice and macaroni is substituted for fruit. The
+ration of Arab bread is 780 grammes for ordinary diet; that of European
+bread 450 grammes. The proportion of other articles is equally liberal.
+
+
+_Clothing._--The sick men's garments are consigned to a storehouse, and
+are replaced by 2 nightshirts, a hospital jacket with a hood, and a pair
+of slippers.
+
+
+_Hygiene._--Drinking water is drawn from the town main and filtered
+before use. There is an ample installation of lavatories with running
+water, baths with hot and cold douches, and Turkish baths. Turkish
+latrines have been fitted in the annexes of the palace. Natives do the
+laundry work and ironing.
+
+
+_Special Quarters._--The Red Cross Hospital is provided with a spacious,
+well-lighted theatre for operations, and all the necessary apparatus. In
+a neighbouring ward a powerful fumigating stove, built by natives after
+a French model, enables instruments and dressings to be completely
+sterilised. Since the introduction of this perfected method of
+sterilisation cases of infection and erysipelas have entirely
+disappeared from the hospital, and post-operation mortality has been
+reduced to barely one quarter per cent.
+
+There is a laboratory devoted to summary analyses; more complete
+chemical or bacteriological analyses are carried out in the town
+institution. The dispensary is well supplied, containing all the most
+modern medicaments.
+
+Six wards are reserved for tuberculous cases, who have their own special
+nurses. Such consumptives as are not confined to bed pass most of the
+day in one of the palace gardens which is assigned to them.
+
+One ward is occupied by wounded officers; another by the
+non-commissioned officers. Two more wards are set apart for patients
+suffering from dysentery. Operation cases are assembled in a special
+chamber adjoining the theatre. Three comfortable English hospital tents
+erected in the garden serve as accommodation for convalescents who have
+to vacate their beds in the palace when an unexpected influx of sick or
+wounded prisoners takes place. All the wards are clean and well kept; at
+the head of each bed is a medical chart detailing the illness and the
+temperature.
+
+
+_Sickness._--Since March 17, 1915, the date of its foundation, up to the
+day of our visit, the Egyptian Red Cross Hospital has treated 2,245
+wounded or sick prisoners.
+
+There are at the present time 149 prisoners under treatment, 8 Ottoman
+officers and 141 soldiers, distributed as follows:
+
+Surgical cases (wounds): 66; among them 13 invalids and 6 who have
+undergone amputation and have been detained a long time in the hospital.
+
+Internal ailments: 38; we may mention among the most serious cases of
+this kind noticed by us, 4 suffering from bilious haemoglobinurea, all
+from Bagdad; 6 from dysentery, anaemic and enfeebled patients; 4 from
+chronic nephritis.
+
+Eye affections: 25.
+
+Consumptives: 20.
+
+Which make up the total of 149 cases.
+
+Among the officers under treatment we may mention: 1 wounded right knee,
+1 scalp wound, 1 compound fracture of the thigh, 1 neck wound, 1 bullet
+wound in the chest, 1 bullet wound in the face, all recent cases coming
+from El Arish.
+
+_Deaths_:
+
+ Number Number
+ Cause of Death. of Deaths of Deaths
+ in 1915. in 1916.
+ Surgical cases 30 17
+ Pleurisy 2 5
+ Dysentery 8 19
+ Typhoid 1 1
+ Pericarditis 1 2
+ Pneumonia 3 11
+ Pulmonary tuberculosis -- 26
+ Intestinal tuberculosis -- 21
+ Nephritis -- 5
+ Gangrene -- 1
+ Hepatitis -- 1
+ Pernicious anaemia -- 1
+ --- ---
+ Total 45 110
+ === ===
+
+The dead were buried in the Musulman cemetery with military honours,
+such comrades as were well enough attending the ceremony.
+
+
+
+
+~5. The Cairo Citadel Camp.~
+
+_(Visited on January 3, 1917.)_
+
+
+This camp occupies the curious Jewel-Palace, one of the monuments of the
+citadel, and contains only women and children coming from Hedjaz, who
+were captured near Mecca.
+
+The dates of arrival are as follows:
+
+ Women and Children.
+ 1st convoy of 123 September 11, 1916
+ 2nd " " 66 October 16, 1916
+ 3rd " " 26 " 28, 1916
+ 4th " " 82 November 7, 1916
+ 5th " " 132 " 29, 1916
+
+
+_Numbers._--The total includes 229 women and 207 children (7 of whom
+were born in camp), and a further batch of 200 women is expected
+shortly.
+
+_The Head Matron_ is Miss Lewis. It is she who has the management and
+full control of this camp, which, by its character and its diversity of
+nationalities, classes and religions, demands great patience, tact and
+kindness--qualities possessed in the highest degree by Miss Lewis. She
+devotes herself entirely, and most capably, to this often very
+ungrateful task, and we welcome this chance of conveying to her the
+expression of our appreciation.
+
+Those interned are divided into three classes. The first class consists
+of officers' wives and children; the second class, of those of the
+non-commissioned officers; and the third class, of soldiers' wives and
+servants. This classification has been adopted in order that the
+dormitories shall be occupied by persons of as nearly as possible the
+same social standing.
+
+
+_Accommodation._--The important group of buildings known as Saleh-el-din
+(Saladin) comprises a great number of rooms whose size and curious
+ornateness contrast strangely with their present use as a concentration
+camp for civilian prisoners. From the windows of these apartments one
+looks across the panorama of Cairo, with its mosques, its minarets and
+the misty background of the desert.
+
+The 40 inhabited rooms are allotted in three sections, corresponding to
+the social classification established for the interned women.
+
+The rooms and corridors are paved throughout with marble, but the
+general distribution of mats and even beautiful carpets gives an
+impression of comfort. The large dimensions of the chambers, as compared
+with the smallness of the number of occupants, give plenty of room for
+exercise and work. Corridors and vestibules connect the different
+buildings. They are lighted with paraffin lamps.
+
+An extensive garden is always at the prisoners' disposal.
+
+
+_Bedding._--The japanned iron bedsteads are furnished with spring and
+stuffed mattresses, sheets, blankets, and pillows. In their arrangement
+one notices the influence of personal taste. Embroidered coverlets,
+hangings and upholstery give to some of the apartments an aspect of
+comfort and even of elegance. The military administration supplies all
+the furniture and the regulation bedding, to which the inmates may add
+what they like at their own expense.
+
+
+_Dress._--The English authorities supply women and children with all
+their linen and other clothing.
+
+
+_Food._--Provisioning is a private enterprise, carried out under a
+contract. The food is the same for all classes, and is unlimited in
+quantity. The women are given as much as they desire of each dish. No
+complaint was made concerning the food, which is wholesome and
+palatable. We visited the kitchen and sampled the day's menu. Milk in
+large quantities is provided for the children. The meals are served in
+three well-appointed dining-rooms.
+
+The hours for meals are:
+ Breakfast, from 7.30 to 8.30.
+ Lunch, from 12.30 to 1.80.
+ Supper, from 5.30 to 6.80.
+
+
+_Hygiene._--Water is supplied from the town mains. Lavatories are
+installed in the corridors near the dormitories. The inmates may have
+hot and cold baths every day. As to laundry work, those of the first
+class can have it done by their own servants or pay the third-class
+women to do it.
+
+The W.C.'s consist of movable tubs on the Turkish system, each
+containing a solution of cresol. They are emptied daily by contract into
+the citadel cesspool, which communicates with the main sewer of Cairo.
+
+
+_Medical Care and Illnesses._--The Head Physician, Captain Scrimgeour,
+comes to the camp every day; a Greek doctor also visits it four times a
+week at 9 o'clock in the morning. These two doctors both speak Turkish
+and Arabic fluently. Three trained nurses and an English midwife take
+charge of the infirmary. As Moslems usually have very good teeth, the
+services of a dentist are not often needed.
+
+The infirmary is very commodious. It consists of a consulting-room, with
+a couch for examinations; a surgery, and a sick ward.
+
+In the infirmary register the name, the disease, the treatment and the
+course of the illness are all duly noted.
+
+When the internment camp was opened a hundred prisoners applied for
+treatment daily; many had suffered great privations previous to their
+capture. At the present time only 5 or 10 patients take advantage of the
+doctor's visit; and these are mild cases, chiefly bronchitis,
+constipation, diarrhoea, and eye affections among women and children,
+and some cases of heart affections and chronic bronchitis among the old
+people.
+
+There is neither malaria, dysentery nor typhus in the camp, and no
+epidemic malady. An early case of tuberculosis, without Koch's bacillus
+in the sputa, was cured.
+
+On the day of our visit to the infirmary we found 5 patients in bed or
+crouched in the oriental manner upon their bedsteads; 1 suffering from
+senile paralysis, 2 from bronchitis, 1 from inflammation of the ears,
+and 1 from general debility.
+
+
+_Maternity._--Confinements not being uncommon, it was necessary to
+establish a maternity ward. There were 5 births during the last three
+months of 1915. Two more occurred upon the day we inspected the camp,
+mothers and infants doing well.
+
+
+_Deaths._--Up to that time there had only been one death at the Citadel
+Camp, that of a baby prematurely born, which died from debility at the
+age of 18 days.
+
+
+_Education._--A school has been started in the camp, and all boys as
+well as girls up to 12 years old are obliged to attend it. A mistress
+teaches them Turkish and Arabic, and also gives them half an hour's
+instruction in English daily.
+
+
+_Religious Services._--The imaum came once to hold a Mahometan service,
+but the interned women expressed no desire that he should repeat his
+visit. However, an old woman, chosen from among them, reads the Koran
+aloud upon feast days.
+
+
+_Intellectual Diversions._--The women seem to have no needs or desires
+on this score. They pass their days in talking and smoking.
+
+The camp has been presented with a gramophone.
+
+
+_Work._--This is absolutely voluntary. The head nurse has organised a
+little dressmaking class, the wife of a former president, Sir B.
+McMahon, having given her £10 with which to buy the necessary materials.
+The results will be divided equally among those who did the work, but as
+most of the women have plenty of money they are not energetic over it.
+
+
+_Money._--Many of those interned had money on them, sometimes a large
+amount, when captured; the whole of which has been left in their hands.
+They often send money through the agency of British officers to their
+husbands who are prisoners in Maadi Camp, or at Sidi Bishr, near
+Alexandria. Others, on the contrary, receive allowances from their
+husbands. Some money orders have also come through the International Red
+Cross Committee.
+
+
+_Correspondence._--Each person interned has the chance of writing once a
+week; those who do not know how to write get help from their companions.
+An interpreter is attached to the camp. Many letters arrive through the
+medium of the International Red Cross Committee, but the exchange of
+correspondence is not generally very active.
+
+
+_Wishes of the Interned._--Some of the women express a wish to see their
+husbands more often, at least once a month; others wish to see their
+sons or brothers who are prisoners at Maadi or at Sidi Bishr. This being
+a legitimate and comprehensible desire, the English Government has
+several times already allowed the husbands to come from these camps (4
+hours distant by train) to spend three or four days with their wives in
+the Citadel. A part of the building containing 12 rooms has been
+reserved for these visits. But it would clearly be impossible to permit
+these indulgences often, as they entail considerable expense, and
+require much organisation and surveillance.
+
+
+_Repatriation._--Some of the women beg to be sent back to Turkey, which
+the British Government has already offered to do. Many, on the other
+hand, prefer to remain in Cairo. The American chargé d'affaires in
+Egypt, M. Knabenschuh, is considering this question. He has visited the
+camp several times, and has transmitted different propositions of the
+English Government to the Sublime Porte. The first offer was to
+repatriate the interned women and children by means of an American
+vessel, which would land them at the port of Mersina in Asia Minor. The
+second was to take them back to Turkey in an English hospital ship,
+which should at the same time carry medical supplies, food and clothing
+to the English prisoners in Asia Minor, and bring away about 25 English
+ladies who had been made prisoners in Mesopotamia. Finally, the English
+Government offered to repatriate the Turkish women without any
+reciprocity conditions. Unhappily, up to now all these proposals have
+borne no fruit. The English Government sincerely desires to be freed
+from the maintenance and surveillance of these people, whom it took
+under its care merely for reasons of humanity.
+
+
+_Special Inquiry at the Citadel Camp._--During our visit to the Maadi
+Camp, Dr. Suleïman Bey, head physician at Taïf, a town of the Hedjaz,
+told us that he had personally nothing to complain of in the camp
+treatment, but that his wife and children, interned in the Cairo
+Citadel, were suffering greatly from the conditions there. What he
+especially criticised was the diet and the medical attendance. These
+complaints, made in much detail, seemed to us to deserve a specific
+inquiry, and we went again to the Citadel next day. We closely
+cross-questioned Mme. S. and another of the ladies. Her replies,
+collected and confronted with the official data, our personal
+observations, and the testimony of the other interned, absolutely
+convinced us that Dr. Suleïman's accusations had no real foundation.
+Mme. S. assured us that meat was only provided three times weekly. We
+have proof that meat is served six times each week, a quarter of an
+English pound being supplied to each person. After telling us that the
+cheese and olives were of the worst quality, she finished by owning that
+she only found the cheese too salt and the olives monotonous. Mme. S.,
+who purchased coffee, biscuits, fruit and bonbons at the canteen, would
+not touch ordinary bread because it was not good enough for her. This
+bread, which is provided by the best bakery in Cairo, is served fresh
+twice a day to whoever desires it. Mme. S. has enough money to buy any
+food that she wishes, either from the canteen or by ordering it in from
+the town. Her companions, less rich and less dainty, find the food
+provided by the camp kitchen both excellent and abundant.
+
+As Dr. Suleïman Bey complained that his two sick children, interned at
+the Citadel with their mother, received no medical care, they were
+examined by Dr. Blanchod. The one suffered on its arrival in camp from
+ophthalmia, now completely cured, no trace of photophobia remains, no
+redness nor oedema; the other had its sub-maxillary glands enlarged;
+these glands are now reduced and nothing to worry about.
+
+These two children have received constant care from (Dr.) Captain
+Scrimgeour, their names are repeatedly entered in the infirmary
+register, and their mother herself expressed gratitude for the care
+which had been lavished upon them.
+
+Dr. Suleïman Bey's complaints upon this point therefore proved equally
+inexact.
+
+
+
+
+~6. The Ras-el-Tin Camp.~
+
+_(Visited January 5, 1917.)_
+
+
+This camp of interned civilians is situated on a rising ground beside
+the sea, 5 kilometres (3 miles) from Alexandria.
+
+The camp contains 45 Ottoman civilians of military age, and 24 others;
+the latter are all elderly men, or have been exempted from military
+service owing to illness. There is one priest (imaum). We also found 400
+Austro-Germans interned at Ras-el-Tin; many of them had been in Egypt
+when war was declared and could not get home.
+
+Though our mission was to visit the Turkish prisoners, we made a point
+of concerning ourselves equally with the Austrians and Germans, and of
+entering into conversation with them.
+
+Several Ottoman prisoners in the camp were making the pilgrimage to
+Mecca when they were captured by the Sherif's troops and passed over to
+the English authorities, who interned them. The camp at Ras-el-Tin was
+to be evacuated in a few days' time, and all the occupants were to be
+transferred to Sidi Bishr Camp, now prepared to accommodate 5,000 men.
+In this camp there will be a special section for civilians.
+
+The commandant of Ras-el-Tin is Major F.G. Owens, who takes the greatest
+interest in his prisoners. Every day he personally receives anyone who
+has a wish or a complaint to bring forward.
+
+The camp was visited in 1916 by the American Consul from Alexandria, and
+also by the American chargé d'affaires from Athens.
+
+
+_Accommodation._--The civilians interned in the camp of Ras-el-Tin are
+placed in tents. These circular tents, set up either on the sand or on a
+cement base, each contain three men. Those of the Ottoman prisoners form
+one sectional group of 24 tents. In the centre of each tent is a
+wire-work cupboard to contain personal belongings. The space inside the
+tent is ample for the three beds. Some prisoners are provided with
+matting and small rugs.
+
+In the stone buildings surrounding the court a certain number of rooms
+are reserved which open upon a veranda. Each contains three beds. These
+comfortably fitted-up chambers are assigned to elderly prisoners or to
+those in weak health. The rest of the camp buildings are occupied by the
+administrative quarters, the kitchens, refectories, canteens, etc. The
+English guard is lodged under canvas in a special section. The camp is
+lighted by electricity.
+
+
+_Bedding._--The bedsteads are iron provided with a wire-spring
+mattress, a squab of vegetable fibre and a sufficient number of
+blankets. All the bedding is kept scrupulously clean.
+
+
+_Food._--The commissariat is supplied by a private contractor. A
+committee presided over by the camp commandant, and composed of
+delegates from among the prisoners, arrange the menus for each week. The
+kitchen is very clean, and the prisoners do not provide the personnel.
+
+Here is the menu for Friday, January 5, 1917,
+the day of our visit:
+ _Breakfast_: Porridge; milk; chocolate; butter; bread.
+ _Lunch_: Haricot soup; ragoût of beef and potatoes.
+ _Dinner_: Rice soup; hashed meat (moussaka), with vegetables;
+ eggs; tea.
+
+The prisoners' menu is extended on Thursdays and Sundays by an extra
+dish and cake of some sort. We examined the day's provision in the
+kitchen, and found it wholesome and appetising. When pork is included in
+the menu, which happens rarely, this item is replaced, in the case of
+the Turkish prisoners, by a dish of eggs and vegetables.
+
+A second kitchen staff, installed in a separate room, prepares a special
+menu which the prisoners can have by paying for it. The commandant
+himself authorised the reservation of this kitchen to provide for such
+prisoners as possess ample means.
+
+Here is the extra menu for January 5, 1917:
+ _Lunch_: Italian dumplings; roast veal; salad and gherkins.
+ _Dinner_: Soup "parmentier"; fish croquettes; braised beef with cabbage.
+
+The meals are served at:
+ Breakfast, half-past seven.
+ Lunch, one o'clock.
+ Dinner, half-past five.
+
+Three canteens furnish all kinds of commodities to the prisoners--ham,
+sausages, preserves, cakes, chocolate, fruits, wine, beer, etc. The
+prices are exactly the same as in the English army canteens. A shop, run
+by a Bulgarian merchant, is permitted for the sale of tobacco, cigars
+and cigarettes. Besides this there is a Viennese who makes cigarettes in
+the camp itself. On Christmas Day the commandant made a generous
+distribution of cigarettes to all the interned men at his own expense.
+They can also obtain at the bar tea, coffee and other drinks. In point
+of fact, we made sure that the camp administration has organised the
+commissariat in a manner that meets all needs.
+
+
+_Clothing._--The men arrived in camp in their own clothes. When these
+began to wear out the administration furnished a new outfit, which
+consists of two flannel shirts, two knitted pairs of drawers, a vest and
+trousers of blue cloth, an overcoat, a police hat or a fez for the
+Turks, socks and slippers. The Mahometans receive Turkish slippers. All
+prisoners have a red scarf and two handkerchiefs. A well-found shop
+sells under-clothing at moderate prices, and articles of outfit, scent,
+post-cards and watches.
+
+
+_Hygiene._--Drinking water, abundant and wholesome, is brought from the
+mains of the town of Alexandria. Besides the toilet lavatories, there
+are 4 bathrooms supplied with hot water and cold douches always
+available. The prisoners go in parties to bathe in the sea near the
+camp, under guard of British soldiers.
+
+The prisoners do their own washing, numerous wash-houses being provided
+for the purpose.
+
+The latrines are partly on the English and partly on the Turkish system,
+1 to every 10 men, cleanly kept. They are disinfected daily. The floor
+and the lower part of the chambers are treated with cresol; the upper
+part is whitewashed. The sewers discharge into the sea. The sweepings
+are burnt in a special stove.
+
+
+_Medical Attention._--The sanitary condition of the camp is inspected at
+regular intervals by the Colonel, medical director of Hospital No. 21,
+Alexandria. Captain (Dr.) Dunne is resident in the camp; he pays a
+medical visit each day at 9 o'clock. Eight to ten prisoners out of the
+total in camp may present themselves for treatment, among them 1 or 2
+Ottomans.
+
+An interned Turkish civilian, Abrahim Assan, by calling an employee in a
+Constantinople factory, who speaks French and English perfectly, serves
+as orderly-interpreter.
+
+An English Red Cross orderly assists the doctor. An Austrian dentist,
+formerly in business at Cairo, gives dental attention to the prisoners;
+he has a complete outfit of instruments.
+
+The infirmary is well housed in a stone building. It contains a
+consulting-room, supplied with a full-flushed lavatory basin; a sick
+ward with 6 iron beds, mattress and coverings _ad libitum_; an isolation
+ward, and a dispensary.
+
+Only slight cases are treated at the infirmary; serious cases are
+removed to Hospital No. 21 at Alexandria, situated within 10 minutes of
+the camp, a large modern hospital overlooking the sea.
+
+On the day of our inspection there were in the infirmary 1 prisoner ill
+with bronchitis; at the hospital 1 tuberculous case and 1 with a wounded
+elbow.
+
+The sanitary state of the camp has always been excellent. Apart from two
+relapse cases of dysentery in 1916, there has been neither trachoma,
+typhoid, typhus, malaria, nor any other infectious disease. This is
+explained by the fact that the interned civilians were not in bad health
+before their captivity, as was the case with soldiers who had sojourned
+in the desert, whom we saw in the other Egyptian camps.
+
+There had been no deaths in the camp or at the hospital in Alexandria.
+The orderly, Abrahim Hassan, told us of his own accord that the sick
+receive the most assiduous attention, and have nothing but praise for
+the resident physician.
+
+
+_Religion and Amusements._--The prisoners offer their prayers daily. A
+mosque will be built for them in the new camp at Sidi Bishr.
+
+Catholics are looked after by several Austrian priests, who used to
+manage Catholic schools in Upper Egypt.
+
+For the Germans and Austrians there is a good circulating library,
+containing English, French and German books.
+
+The prisoners have formed an orchestra, and organised theatrical
+performances, for which they have painted pretty scenery.
+
+There is a cinematograph performance every evening. There are a piano
+and harmonium. A photographer, who had an establishment in Cairo before
+the war, practises his art in the camp.
+
+
+_Discipline._--The very occasional cases of infraction of rules which
+entail one or more days' detention in the police cells, have a special
+diet prescribed for them. The military authorities find the general
+conduct of the civilians quite satisfactory.
+
+
+_Exercise and Sports._--The prisoners have at their own disposal that
+part of the grounds lying between the tents and the barracks, a broad
+space where they can amuse themselves all day long with football and
+other games.
+
+They have also a tennis-court, of which the Austro-Germans make more use
+than the Orientals; a committee of the prisoners arrange the hours for
+each set of players. Skittles are very popular. Fencing is eagerly
+learned; the English officer who teaches it being delighted with his
+pupils' progress. Lessons in gymnastics, like those in other sports, are
+optional.
+
+Periodically a gymkhana is got up, with donkey races, gymnastic
+competitions, and the distribution of prizes.
+
+
+_Work._--No work is demanded from the prisoners.
+
+
+_Correspondence, Money Orders and Parcels._--Very few money orders are
+received. The interned Turks are chiefly illiterate; those whose wives
+are interned at Cairo, and who are allowed to occasionally visit them,
+seldom write, as they know them to be well treated. Parcels are seldom
+sent to the camp, and hitherto no philanthropic society has busied
+itself over the necessitous.
+
+
+_Prisoners' Aid._--The only plea which has been addressed to us by means
+of the Ottoman interpreter, who speaks French and English extremely
+well, comes from a certain number of destitute prisoners. They wish to
+have, in addition to the complete outfit with woollen overcoat supplied
+by the English Government, a change of warm garments, which they have
+not the means to buy. Many find it difficult to wear the kind of
+foot-gear in ordinary use--the heelless leather Turkish slippers--and
+wish for laced shoes such as they wear at home. We asked the interpreter
+to make out a list of names of the needy; and after submitting it to the
+commandant of the camps for verification, we decided to send him from
+the Ottoman Red Cross Fund the sum of 2,000 francs, to provide these
+prisoners with the extra garments which they require, and with shoes and
+tobacco.
+
+
+
+
+~7. Sidi Bishr Camp.~
+
+_(Visited on January 6, 1917.)_
+
+
+The camp of Sidi Bishr is situated 15 kilometres (9-1/2 miles) to the
+north-east of Alexandria in a healthy spot on the sea shore, where the
+sand dunes form little hillocks intersected by miniature valleys. Palms
+are scattered over it, and it lies open to the fresh breezes. The view
+from the highest points of the camp is very extensive. A recently
+constructed road for vehicular traffic leads into the camp, all the
+appointments of which give the impression that everything has been done
+to make the prisoners as comfortable as possible. A kitchen garden has
+just been laid out in a sheltered place, and a flat piece of ground
+surrounded by palm trees prepared for games, tennis, football, etc.
+
+
+_Strength._--The camp at Sidi Bishr contains 430 officers, 60 of whom
+have been here since February, 1915; 410 orderlies captured with their
+officers, on whom they attend, each officer having 1 orderly; 10 imaums
+(priests); 20 civilians, who were captured by the Sherif of Mecca and at
+once handed over to the English.
+
+The commandant of the camp is Lieut.-Colonel Coates.
+
+The American chargé d'affaires in Egypt has twice visited the camp.
+
+
+_Accommodation._--The equipment of the camp at Sidi Bishr not having
+been entirely completed before our visit we found some of the buildings
+still in course of erection. But the officers' quarters were ready, and
+lacked nothing except some furniture, which was daily expected. The
+barracks, 25 metres (81 feet) long and 8 metres (20 feet) wide,
+consisted of a solid wooden framework, with partitions either of timber
+or cement, constructed in the camp by native workmen. A corridor about 1
+metre 75 (6 feet) wide runs all along the front of the building, and
+gives access to the chambers. These measure about 3 metres 50 (14 feet)
+by 4 metres (17 feet), and 4 metres (17 feet) from the wooden floor to
+the ceiling. All the interior walls are lime-washed. Each room has two
+windows, glazed and also covered with wire gauze to exclude insects, and
+a latched door. Chimneys rise above the roof, which is of timber covered
+with tarred felt.
+
+According to regulation, the number of occupants of each chamber depends
+upon their grade. Officers up to the rank of captain are quartered four
+in each dormitory; captains three, and colonels two. (Some superior
+officers have each a separate chamber.) The orderlies are housed
+elsewhere. All the buildings are lighted by electricity, generated by a
+local plant.
+
+
+_Bedding._--The iron beds have wire springs, mattresses stuffed with
+vegetable fibre, pillows, and sufficiency of blankets, to which many
+officers like to add curtains and coverlets. The rest of the furniture
+is adequate, and easy-chairs are general.
+
+
+_Food._--The officers' mess is run by a contractor. One of the officers,
+appointed by his comrades, is entrusted with arranging the menus and
+seeing them properly carried out. No limit is fixed to the choice and
+quantity of food. The cost must not exceed 10 piastres (about 2s.)
+daily, including tea, coffee, sugar, preserves, etc. The officers can
+get any extras which they desire either from the canteen or from the
+town, except alcoholic drinks, which are forbidden. The meat is
+previously inspected by the veterinary of the sanitary department. The
+bread is particularly good. Officers are given European bread, orderlies
+native bread. We tasted the day's menu ourselves. No complaints with
+regard to food reached us. The Turkish officers take their meals in two
+dining-rooms, each of which seats 150. The tables are covered with
+cloths; the china and plate are suitable.
+
+The orderlies' fare is wholesome and sufficient.
+
+
+_Dress._--The Turkish officers are warmly and suitably clad. They can
+procure for themselves all kinds of toilet articles and other equipment.
+Most of them wear civilian costume with a fez. An Alexandria tradesman
+comes to the camp to take their orders.
+
+When inspecting the orderlies we heard some of them complain of a lack
+of linen, especially of drawers. Surprised by this, we made an immediate
+inquiry, which produced the following results: the orderlies all
+received their regulation supply of linen, and signed a receipt in the
+register. A certain number of them subsequently sold the articles to
+their officers; these are the men who now complain of a deficiency of
+linen.
+
+
+_Hygiene._--Abundant and wholesome drinking water is laid on from the
+town system. The toilet supply comes to cement basins provided with many
+taps. The water from the lavatories and kitchens empties itself into a
+lake at some distance from the camp.
+
+In the morning the officers use the baths or douches fitted up close to
+the barracks, and separated from each other by woven grass partitions.
+
+The officers' linen is washed by their orderlies in very convenient
+wash-houses built of wood and cement.
+
+There are 44 Turkish W.C.'s, cemented, at a good distance from the
+quarters. They are arranged over cesspools 18 feet deep, disinfected
+every day with whitewash and cresol, and are quite odourless.
+
+
+_Medical Attention._--The health of the inmates of Sidi Bishr Camp is
+looked after by an English doctor, Captain Gillespie, assisted by an
+Armenian doctor, who practised at Aleppo in Turkey before the war.
+
+These two doctors speak Arabic and Turkish.
+
+An English corporal and 5 English hospital orderlies take care of the
+sick.
+
+Twenty-one Egyptian orderlies do the sanitary work of the camp; serious
+cases are sent to the English hospital at Alexandria. A Turkish
+Surgeon-Major, Dr. Ibrahim, interned at the camp, is present at
+operations performed upon his Ottoman comrades in the hospital. He
+expressed himself as entirely satisfied with the care bestowed upon
+them.
+
+The infirmary contains 12 iron bedsteads, with wool mattresses and
+blankets. The consulting room is well fitted up, the cupboards
+abundantly supplied with drugs. An isolation ward accommodates
+infectious cases in the incubation stage. Bathrooms reserved for the
+patients adjoin the infirmary, and there is a kitchen service for
+preparing special diet.
+
+Officers troubled by their teeth are taken to a dentist in Alexandria.
+
+The prisoners' garments and bedding are sterilised in a special
+apparatus.
+
+All new arrivals pass 14 days in quarantine, in special quarters in one
+of the sections of the camp. They are permitted to join their comrades
+only when it is certain that they are free from any contagious malady.
+At present 36 officers and 34 orderlies are in quarantine.
+
+
+_Illnesses and Deaths_-All officers imprisoned at Sidi Bishr having been
+vaccinated against smallpox, typhoid, and cholera, there are no
+epidemics in the camp. Three to five officers come forward each morning
+when the doctor makes his rounds. There are perhaps 6 light cases of
+malaria weekly, 3 to 5 cases of bacillic dysentery every month, treated
+with serum; 1 case of more serious dysentery was sent away to the
+English Hospital in Alexandria. In summer there are some mild cases of
+diarrhoea. There were 3 cases of trachoma among the officers' orderlies.
+Four tuberculous patients, coming from the Hedjaz, were conveyed to the
+hospital without any stay at the camp; two died after 20 and 30 days of
+treatment respectively. In the infirmary at Sidi Bishr are now:
+
+1 officer with a foot wound, 1 suffering from pharyngitis, and one
+passing 1/2 per cent. of albumen.
+
+Some of the Turkish officers were wounded in the war:
+
+One whose thigh was amputated is provided with a fine artificial
+substitute; one who had both bones of the lower arm fractured, and was
+operated upon four times, is now well on the way to recovery.
+
+One suffering from hemiplegia, owing to a fractured skull, is now able
+to move again and to walk with crutches. Another lame officer is
+affected by rupture of a main nerve in the leg.
+
+Salik Sidki, judge of Mecca, entrusted us with a letter of thanks to the
+English authorities, in recognition of the care which he received at the
+hospital where he underwent a severe operation for a chronic affection
+of the pylorus.
+
+
+_Prisoners' Wishes._--Some officers complained of not being allowed to
+go to Alexandria to make their purchases; but in the circumstances such
+a request could not be gratified. On the other hand, a certain number of
+officers have obtained permission to go to Cairo and spend a few days
+with their wives interned in the Citadel; it is evident that this favour
+is only accorded in exceptional cases and cannot be made general. To
+extend it equally to sons, brothers and other relations, as some of the
+prisoners desire, is clearly impossible.
+
+The officers were offered two hours' walk every morning outside the
+camp, in parties of 26, under the supervision of an unarmed soldier, on
+condition of their giving their parole not to escape. This they refused,
+declaring that a conditional proposal was no privilege. They can,
+however, stroll about freely inside the limits of the camp, which is
+very extensive.
+
+We received several complaints concerning rain having recently found its
+way into the barracks. But the extreme rarity of such an occurrence
+makes it of no importance.
+
+
+_Pay._--Officers' pay is fixed by the War Office. That of lieutenants
+comes to 5 francs daily, that of captains to 5 francs 75, that of
+superior officers is proportionate to their rank.
+
+The orderlies, being privates, are not paid. Some of them receive pay
+from their officers, others get nothing. Most of them have some money,
+but nevertheless we have decided to remit £20 to the camp commandant for
+the poorest soldiers' small needs.
+
+
+_Correspondence._--Prisoners may write as often as they like, but seldom
+take advantage of the privilege, and as a rule receive few letters,
+which take from 40 to 45 days in reaching them. Few money orders come to
+the camp.
+
+
+_Religion and Amusements._--The prisoners have every chance of
+worshipping according to their own creed. The imaums can use a building
+arranged as a mosque and lighted by electricity. There is one mosque
+inside the camp enclosure.
+
+The camp contains 40 musical instruments; a piano has been hired for
+the officers.
+
+The prisoners play football, tennis, cards and chess. Many amuse
+themselves with reading.
+
+
+
+
+~8. Bilbeis Camp.~
+
+_(Visited on January 16, 1917.)_
+
+
+Bilbeis Camp is situated 65 kilometres (40-1/2 miles) to the north-east
+of Cairo, on the confines of the cultivated land of the Delta. Founded
+in the month of August, 1916, it now contains 540 prisoners grouped as
+follows:
+
+
+_First Division._--One hundred and thirty-five Bedouins from the East
+and the Sinai peninsula, and civilians coming from El Arish; 9 Arab
+soldiers of the Ottoman army; 5 Turkish soldiers from Syria; 30
+Egyptians.
+
+
+_Second Division._--One hundred and seventy-five Senoussi and soldiers
+from Tripoli; 185 Bedouins from the West, and civilian prisoners of
+divers nationalities.
+
+Among these prisoners are included several young boys who have relatives
+among the interned. The characteristic of this camp is the diversity of
+nationalities herein represented. Though the number of Turks is
+restricted, we thought it wise to visit this camp in order to assure
+ourselves that the treatment of the prisoners is the same as in other
+Egyptian camps.
+
+The camp commandant is Colonel Collins.
+
+The camp is surrounded by a barbed wire fence.
+
+The prisoners are lodged under canvas, 8 men to a tent. At the present
+time two great barracks of timber framework and reeds are being erected,
+each large enough to contain 250 men. Their dimensions ensure perfect
+ventilation. The sandy soil shows no trace of damp. Between the tents
+little gardens are laid out wherein, thanks to the abundant water, the
+prisoners can grow flowers and vegetables.
+
+The camp is lighted by paraffin reflector lamps.
+
+
+_Bedding._--Mats of plaited rush. Two blankets per man.
+
+
+_Exercise._--The dimensions of the camp leave large clear spaces where
+the prisoners can walk at their pleasure.
+
+
+_Food._--Cooking is done by the prisoners themselves, provisions being
+supplied by the administration. The quantities are the same as in the
+other camps. The menu consists of: meat, bread, butter, cheese, lentils,
+fresh vegetables, onions, rice, etc. The prisoners whom we interrogated,
+either personally or through the medium of an interpreter, declared that
+they were well fed. A little canteen, set up in a tent apart, provides
+them with such small luxuries as tea, sugar, and so on, at a moderate
+price. The prisoners get tobacco regularly. Each man has a plate, an
+enamelled bowl, and a spoon.
+
+
+_Dress._--The prisoners have all received a complete outfit. Their
+clothing was clean and warm. The mending of linen and outer garments is
+done by tailor prisoners, working in a tent provided for the purpose.
+Their headdress is the fez or a red cap.
+
+
+_Hygiene._--Drinking water is distributed everywhere throughout the camp
+by means of pipes well supplied with taps. Water for washing purposes is
+abundantly distributed to the lavatories, douches and bathing-places.
+
+The prisoners do their washing in well-fitted wash-houses; a movable
+furnace facilitates the weekly disinfection of all the prisoners'
+effects.
+
+The latrines, on the Turkish system, consist of movable tubs, emptied
+each day by means of a "shadouf," and then disinfected with cresol and
+whitewash. There are no smells in the camp.
+
+
+_Medical Attention._--Dr. Ibrahim Zabaji, a Syrian refugee doctor,
+undertakes the medical charge. His work is supervised twice a week by
+Lieut.-Colonel Garner and Captain Scrimgeour.
+
+There are 3 Turkish orderlies and 1 Coptic orderly.
+
+The infirmary is clean and well appointed. It is sub-divided into 4
+quarters: the consulting room, dispensary, sick ward and isolation ward.
+
+The beds are iron with wire springs, the mattresses stuffed with
+vegetable fibre, the number of blankets not limited.
+
+All the men have been vaccinated against smallpox and cholera. We
+learned from the infirmary registers that 30-40 men attend daily at 8
+o'clock, the doctor's visiting hour.
+
+The advanced age of many of the prisoners, who are suffering from
+chronic affections, accounts for this large attendance.
+
+The day we visited the infirmary it contained 8 patients: 3 cases of
+malaria, 3 cases of bronchial pneumonia, and 2 cases of dysentery.
+
+As soon as they arrived in camp 25 men were attacked with tertian
+malaria; 15 are cured, 10 are still being treated with quinine. Of 7
+attacked with dysentery 5 are now cured.
+
+Ten men were suffering from trachoma and are still being treated with
+protargol.
+
+There has been no typhoid fever, nor typhus, nor any other epidemic in
+the camp.
+
+The serious cases are sent to the Egyptian hospital at Zagazig, where
+they are looked after by native doctors. There are 4 prisoners now in
+hospital: 1 eye case, 1 of tuberculosis, 1 of bronchitis, and 2 feverish
+patients under observation.
+
+Six prisoners have died in the hospital since the camp was established
+here. One had tumour on the brain, 2 chronic enteritis, 1 tuberculosis,
+and 1 an intestinal obstruction. The dead were buried with military
+honours and according to the rites of their religion.
+
+
+_Work._--With the exception of fatigue duties, nothing is required from
+the prisoners besides a little light work in the gardens near the camp.
+Some of them make small articles which are sold for their benefit.
+
+
+_Correspondence._--The number of illiterates being very high (98 per
+cent.), letters are comparatively few. The prisoners are allowed to
+write three times a week, and a certain number of them get more educated
+comrades to write for them. Correspondence is practically impossible for
+those who belong to nomadic tribes.
+
+
+_Religion._--Except one Copt, all the prisoners are Mahometans. There
+are many imaums among them. Religious exercises are practised freely and
+regularly.
+
+
+_Discipline and Behaviour._--There are no complaints as to discipline,
+and no attempts to escape have taken place. Despite racial diversities,
+few quarrels take place among the prisoners, and the authorities seldom
+need to interfere. We spoke to an old and infirm sheik who is treated
+with particular regard and has a tent to himself; he told us that he is
+in every way satisfied.
+
+
+
+
+~CONCLUSIONS~
+
+
+The Red Cross International Committee, at Geneva, has since the
+beginning of the war organised visits to the camps of prisoners of war
+and of civilian prisoners in the various belligerent countries.
+
+The members of the mission sent to Egypt, MM. Dr. F. Blanched, E.
+Schoch, and F. Thormeyer, had already inspected camps in Germany,
+France, Morocco and Russia. They may be allowed to compare the treatment
+of the Egyptian prisoners with what they had seen elsewhere.
+
+We express our deep gratitude to the English authorities for all the
+facilities which they gave us for the accomplishment of our mission.
+
+We will now sum up the whole set of observations made by us.
+
+We visited the camps of Heliopolis, Maadi, the Citadel of Cairo,
+Ras-el-Tin, Sidi Bishr, and the hospitals of Abbassiah and the Egyptian
+Red Cross.
+
+The camps are situated in healthy localities, and their dimensions are
+amply sufficient for the population that they hold. The accommodation
+seems to us exactly suited to the conditions of the country and climate.
+Whether barracks are specially constructed for the prisoners, or stone
+buildings are adapted to their use, these results are obtained.
+
+Ventilation is sufficient everywhere. Measures of protection against the
+cold, so difficult to render effective in other countries, are
+unimportant here, owing to the mildness of the climate. Both boarded and
+beaten earth floors are kept perfectly clean.
+
+The bedding of the prisoners of war (non-commissioned officers and
+privates) is composed of plaited rush mats, such as they are accustomed
+to use when at home. These mats are regularly cleansed, and replaced as
+they wear out. The officers, civilian prisoners and sick are provided
+with iron spring beds, and mattresses generally stuffed with vegetable
+fibre. For hospitals and officers, pillows and coverlets are also
+supplied.
+
+The blankets assigned to each prisoner vary from 3 to 5, a number which
+we have never seen equalled in other places.
+
+As to clothing, the military authorities furnish the men with all that
+is necessary: 2 pairs of drawers, 2 flannel shirts, 2 pairs of socks, a
+woollen belt, 1 neckerchief, 1 pair of trousers, a tunic of blue cloth
+(or beige) and a cloak. All these garments are warm, clean, and of good
+quality. All the Turks wear the national head-covering, the fez.
+Decorations are allowed to be worn unrestrictedly. Owing to the date of
+our visit we were not able to inspect the summer outfit, but the
+prisoners told us that in the hot season they wore blue linen suits.
+
+The civilian prisoners whose personal belongings were worn out received
+a complete equipment.
+
+The interned civilians were decently and sufficiently clothed.
+
+Officers can order their clothes at their own expense from the town
+tailors.
+
+The private soldiers all wear the oriental slippers; non-commissioned
+officers are given high-lows. All necessaries for repairs are provided
+by the camp administration.
+
+Everywhere we found the prisoners adequately and suitably dressed. No
+external mark shows their position as prisoners of war, except a metal
+medallion attached to the tunic.
+
+We can assert that the commissariat of the Egyptian prisoners leaves
+nothing to be desired. The fact that the prisoners prepare their own
+food insures them a diet suitable to their tastes and customs. The
+quantities supplied are calculated upon a very liberal scale. The
+quality, whether of bread, meat or vegetables, is excellent and
+constant.
+
+The officers' mess is entrusted to private contract. They arrange their
+own menu. The daily board is very moderate. Well-stocked canteens enable
+them to obtain additions at prices fixed by the authorities.
+
+The sick in hospital have a regimen suited to their condition prescribed
+by the doctors. The milk provided is of excellent quality.
+
+The health department is remarkably well organised everywhere. Drinking
+water and water for washing purposes are equally abundant. There is an
+_ad libitum_ supply for douches and baths in every camp. The
+arrangements for laundering linen are very efficient.
+
+Each camp is provided with a disinfecting furnace, linen and upper
+garments being sterilised once weekly. There are no vermin anywhere.
+Special pains are taken over the cleansing of prisoners newly arrived
+from the front. The result of these measures and of the system of
+vaccination is seen in the entire freedom of the camps from epidemics.
+
+Turkish or English latrines are sufficient in number, odourless, and
+regularly disinfected.
+
+In every camp medical attention is given by a staff of first-class
+English physicians, assisted by Armenian or Syrian doctors; hospital
+orderlies keep the quarters in perfect order. The infirmaries are
+spacious, well lighted, thoroughly stocked with drugs and with surgical
+apparatus and dressings.
+
+If dentistry be needed, which is rare among Ottomans, it is supplied by
+dentists from the town or resident in the camps.
+
+Cases of mutilation are provided with artificial limbs.
+
+An examination of the medical register in all the camps has convinced
+us of their good sanitary condition. The small number of sick, and the
+slight character of the ailments, corroborate what we have ourselves
+observed from the hygienic point of view. The death-rate is very low.
+
+Deceased prisoners are interred with military honours and according to
+the rites of their religion.
+
+The space enclosed within the camps permits the prisoners to enjoy
+walking exercise as well as outdoor games.
+
+The English military authorities have not sanctioned compulsory work for
+prisoners. Except for sanitary fatigue duties, prisoners have the whole
+disposal of their own time. The numerous complaints provoked in other
+countries by forced labour are entirely absent among the Ottoman
+prisoners in Egypt.
+
+Imaums take religious charge, and the prisoners have full liberty to
+carry out their daily worship.
+
+Correspondence is less active than elsewhere owing to the large
+proportion of illiterate prisoners. Letters are long on the road because
+of the great distances traversed. The censorship is carried out in a
+liberal spirit and gives rise to no complaints. Money orders sent from
+Turkey are paid in full; but their number, as well as that of parcels,
+is restricted.
+
+Assaults and corporal punishment are totally unknown in the camps. The
+only disciplinary penalty, very seldom applied, consists of arrest for a
+period fixed by the military authorities. We were happy to learn that
+the discipline of the Turkish prisoners is excellent. Their own
+commissariat officers exercise a good influence. We were ourselves
+struck by the correct bearing of the men and their good humour. They
+fully appreciate the English authorities' kindness to them.
+
+To sum up, our conviction, based upon careful investigations, is that
+the inspectors, commandants and officers of the camps treat the
+prisoners with humanity and do all in their power to soften their lot.
+
+We form the impression that the English Government's proposals
+concerning repatriation of the interned civilians will soon bear fruit;
+and we hope that this measure will be extended to all mutilated
+prisoners of war.
+
+
+CAIRO, _January, 1917_.
+
+ The Delegates of the Red Cross International Committee.
+ Dr. F. BLANCHOD.
+ F. THORMEYER.
+ EMMANUEL SCHOCH.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Turkish Prisoners in Egypt, by Various
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