The Service du travail obligatoire (English: Compulsory Work Service; STO) was the forced enlistment and deportation of hundreds of thousands of French workers to Nazi Germany in order to work as forced labour for the German war effort during World War II.
Formally created under laws and regulations of Vichy France,[1] Nazi Germany set up the STO to compensate for its loss of manpower as it enlisted more and more soldiers for the Eastern Front. The German government promised that for every three French workers sent over, they would release one French prisoner of war. Those requisitioned under the STO were accommodated in work camps on German soil.
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On 22 June 1942, Prime Minister of France Pierre Laval announced the institution of the relève, whereby French workers were encouraged to volunteer to work in Germany to secure the release of French prisoners of war.[2]
The law of September 4, 1942, signed by Marshal of France and Chief of State of Vichy France Philippe Pétain as well as Prime Minister and Head of Government Pierre Laval in his cabinet, was entitled "loi du 4 septembre 1942 relative à l'utilisation et à l'orientation de la main-d'œuvre" or "Law of 4 September 1942 on the use and guidance of the workforce", and required all able-bodied men 18-50 and single women 21-35 "be subject to do any work that the Government deems necessary".
The law of February 16, 1943, signed by Prime Minister Laval for Minister of Justice Joseph Barthélemy deemed it necessary that all males over 20 be subject to the service du travail obligatoire, which was to be regulated. Regulations were issued the same day and immediately subjected males born between 1920-1922, roughly all males between 20-23, to the service.