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IN THE NO MAN'S LAND BETWEEN GERMANY AND CZECHOSLOVAKIA.—After the occupation of South Moravia, the German political police expelled 156 families from three villages and sent them into this neutral land. As Czechoslovakia refused to admit them they had nowhere to go and spent some time in the open, with practically no food and with one tent among them.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MS19381223.2.29

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Standard, Volume LIX, Issue 21, 23 December 1938, Page 4

Word Count
59

IN THE NO MAN'S LAND BETWEEN GERMANY AND CZECHOSLOVAKIA.—After the occupation of South Moravia, the German political police expelled 156 families from three villages and sent them into this neutral land. As Czechoslovakia refused to admit them they had nowhere to go and spent some time in the open, with practically no food and with one tent among them. Manawatu Standard, Volume LIX, Issue 21, 23 December 1938, Page 4

IN THE NO MAN'S LAND BETWEEN GERMANY AND CZECHOSLOVAKIA.—After the occupation of South Moravia, the German political police expelled 156 families from three villages and sent them into this neutral land. As Czechoslovakia refused to admit them they had nowhere to go and spent some time in the open, with practically no food and with one tent among them. Manawatu Standard, Volume LIX, Issue 21, 23 December 1938, Page 4