THE GERMAN ARMY
DISAFFECTION IN NORWAY CONDITIONS UNDER NAZI RULE LETTER FROM NEW ZEALANDER (Special to Daily Times) INVERCARGILL, Oct. 17. Suggestions of disaffection within the German Army of occupation in Norway are contained in a letter which has been received in Invercargill from a young New Zealand man who was studying at Oslo when the Germans invaded the country. He made his escape to Stockholm, and through friends in. Norway has been able to gain information of the conditions under Nazi rule, The passage of mail from Sweden to British countries is extremely difficult, and the letter was received by a circuitous route. The writer stated that he had not received a letter from New Zealand for four months at the time of writing. “Times are hard in Norway, and the people have to subsist on black bread.” he wrote. “There are no eggs, very little butter, sugar or coffee. The estimated German forces in Norway are 360,000, the majority being on the west coast, where the Germans have bought all the fishing boats and are practising embarking and disembarking on these small vessels. There has been a lot of trouble within the German ranks, and apparently a lot of troops are tired of the war and do not wish to be. in the big attack on England, which is looked upon as a rather dangerous affair. A number of soldiers were shot in Bergen for defeatism. The only business in Norway that is booming is airport budding.” I If the war continued until next spring, continued the letter, there was a chance of internal dissolution in Germany, as times were very hard there. Food was scarce and of poor quality, and nobody had enough to eat. Because of the hard winter, all the crops had to be resown in the spring, and the only seeds available were oats and barley. “ The British air raids on West Germany have done tremendous damage, especially in Hamburg, where the waterfront has been practically ruined.” the New Zealander wrote “This information, through a neutral source, is of special, interest in view of the recent cable news about continued attacks by the Royal Air Force on Hamburg.” ' Comment on the conditions .in Sweden are brief and to the .point“ln Sweden,” he wrote, “food is still plentiful, but warm water is a dream, a thing of the past, because of the scarcity of fuel.”
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Otago Daily Times, Issue 24432, 18 October 1940, Page 13
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400THE GERMAN ARMY Otago Daily Times, Issue 24432, 18 October 1940, Page 13
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