The Beisfjord massacre (Norwegian: Beisfjord-massakren[1]) was a massacre on July 18, 1942 in Beisfjord, Norway of 288 political[2] prisoners who were killed at Lager I Beisfjord (German: "No. 1 camp Beisfjord" - in Norwegian Beisfjord fangeleir).
The massacre had been ordered a few days earlier by the Reichskommissar for Norway Josef Terboven.[2]
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In order to build defences in Norway against the allies, the Germans brought in political prisoners and prisoners-of-war from their operations in Eastern Europe to work as forced labour on infrastructure projects.
In 1942, 900 Yugoslavian prisoners were transported by ship to Beisfjord (approximately 10 kilometers east of Narvik) where a prison camp was established.[3] 588 prisoners were transported to Bjørnefjell (approximately 30 km (19 mi) north-east of Beisfjord) to be quarantined there, and the camp at Øvre Jernvann was established.[3]
Conditions at the camp were unhealthy and there was an outbreak of typhus.[4]
On the evening of July 17, "prisoners regarded as healthy" were marched out of Lager I Beisfjord by nearly all of the Norwegian[5] guards and a number of German superiors.[2] (Their destination was 30 km (19 mi) north-east — Bjørnefjell.[6]) The remaining 288 prisoners were assembled and ordered to stand in groups of twenty besides what was to became mass graves. Those who did were shot.[2]
A number of prisoners refused to leave the infirmary.[2] The building was set ablaze; those who jumped out of the windows were shot.[2]
In 2009, Aftenposten wrote "That Norwegian pupils are sent on organized bus trips to Germany and Poland to get a sense of the atrocities there, without knowing that equivalent atrocities were committed in Norway, puzzles the leader of Nordnorsk Fredssenter in Narvik". Adding "That the events [of the massacre] were covered up, is feared by the head of a war museum in Narvik (Nordland Røde Kors Krigsminnemuseum)[note 1], because a paramilitary force of Norwegians (hirdmenn) participated in the atrocities". [2]