It says interred for the english prisoners. Later it says they were freed. Accordingly to the oxford dictionary:


inter

/inter/

 • verb (interred, interring) place (a corpse) in a grave or tomb.
 — ORIGIN Old French enterrer, from Latin in- ‘into’ + terra ‘earth’.

"British prisoners of war had been interred"

So i changed from interred to captured and kept.

Emerson Cargnin