Mass Murder In Furtherance Of The Zionist Agenda.

                                                             One Of The Many Funeral Pyres At Dresden In February 1945.

                                                  Cologne Was Bombed Two Hundred And Sixty Two Separate Times.

                                                                    Hamburg Was One Of The Most Heavily Bombed Cities.

 The total number of German civilian deaths was approximately thirteen and a half million. The number of Britons killed is recorded by the home office as sixty thousand five hundred and ninety five.

 

Deaths and injuries

1939-45



Compiled by Ministry of Home Security from police and medical reports

Number of civilians in Great Britain
killed by enemy action 1939-45

Number of civilians in London civil
defence region killed by enemy
action 1939-45

1939 - -
1940 23 767 13 596
1941 19 918 6 487
1942 3 236 27
1943 2 372 542
1944 8 475 7 533
1945 1 860 1 705
59 628 29 890
Northern Ireland
(1941) 967
60 595

The total of 60 595 is made up of:

Men 26 923
Women 25 399
Children under 16 years 7 736
Unidentified 537



 

Source: Civil Defence Department of the Home Office

Number of civilians in Great Britain
injured by enemy action 1939-45

Number of civilians in London civil
defence region injured by enemy
action 1939-45

Admitted to Hospital

Admitted to Hospital

1939 - -
1940 30 529 18 378
1941 21 165 7 641
1942 4 148 52
1943 3 450 989
1944 21 989 19 611
1945 4 223 3 836
85 504 50 507
Northern Ireland
(1941 - 2) 678
86 182

The total of 86 182 is made up of:

Men 40 738
Women 37 822
Children under 16 years 7 622


Derived from Ministry of Home Security sources
The proportions of casualties attributable to the enemy's chief weapons have been estimated as follows:


Killed
Seriously
Injured

Total
Bombs 51 509 61 423 112 932
Flying bombs (V-1) 6 184 17 981 24 165
Long-range rockets (V-2) 2 754 6 523 9 277
Cross-Channel bombardment 148 255 403
60 595 86 182 146 777

The above tables include Civil defence workers on duty (the General Services and the Regular and Auxiliary Police and Fire Services) who suffered 6 838 casualties (2 379 killed and 4 459 seriously injured). Of these 6 220 were men, and 618 women.
The above tables do not include the Home Guard (1 206 of whom died of wounds, injury or illness due to their service), nor merchant seaman dying in Britain as a result of enemy action of any kind, nor civilians killed by the enemy at sea (about another 663 in total).

 
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