The Rab concentration camp was one of the several Italian concentration camps and it was established during World War II, in July 1942, on the Italian-occupied island of Rab . According to historians James Walston and Carlo Spartaco Capogeco, at 18%, the annual mortality rate in the camp was higher than the average mortality rate in the Nazi concentration camp of Buchenwald . According to a report by Monsignor Jože Srebrnič, Bishop of Krk on 5 August 1943 to Pope Pius XII: witnesses, who took part in the burials, state unequivocally that the number of the dead totals at least 3500. However, other sources place the figure at around 2,000.In September 1943, after the armistice with Italy, the camp was closed, but some of the remaining Jewish internees were deported by German forces to the extermination camp at Auschwitz. Yugoslavia, Greece and Ethiopia requested the extradition of some 1,200 Italian war criminals, who, however, were never brought before an appropriate tribunal because the British government, at the beginning of the Cold War, saw in Pietro Badoglio a guarantor of an anti-communist post-war Italy.
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