From Euro News:
“35 years on from the fall of
the Berlin Wall, echoes of east-west division linger”
The wall, which separated East
and West Germany, stood for 28 years before it was torn down in 1989. 35 years
ago the Berlin wall fell, reuniting Germans who were divided between east and
west for nearly three decades. As Berliners poured through holes in the
concrete to reach the other side, the iron curtain that separated the Soviet
Union from the West was shattered. For some, the event was a tragedy rather
than a cause for celebration.
Institute for European Politics
research fellow Laura Worsch says Russian President Vladimir Putin calls the
breakup of the Soviet Union the "greatest trauma and tragedy in Russian
history. So there you can already see that in his world and in his ideology, he
would rather have this separation again." She says it is not just about
separation, but also about having military and economic power over people. Less
than a thousand kilometres east of Berlin at the border with Europe, new walls
are being built. Poland is fortifying its border with Belarus to stop illegal
migrants, who according to Warsaw are being used by Belarus and Moscow to
destabilise the West. Worsch says this wall is a "humanitarian catastrophe
for the refugees, for the migrants that are stuck there in the forest with no
infrastructure, no food and no humanitarian aid whatsoever."
'Uphold freedom' This
year, people in the German capital will celebrate the fall of the wall with the
slogan "uphold freedom." Worsch draws a link between the
Berlin Wall and countries in Europe fortifying their borders. In
September, Germany announced it would be imposing temporary checks on its land
borders, citing concerns over immigration. Austria, Poland, the Czech
Republic and Switzerland have also imposed border checks, a move critics say
undermines freedom of movement in the European Union. Decisions made to
impose border checks are mostly motivated by concerns around illegal
immigration. In October, migration dominated a summit of European leaders with
several calling for so-called "return hubs" — third country centres
where migrants would be processed. Worsch says that, in this case, there
"are so many crises that I think it's natural that people feel vulnerable
and threatened and tend to kind of close themselves off from the world and
concentrate on what they feel is theirs."
Dividing east and west The
Berlin wall, which was in place in the city between 1961 and 1989, divided the
city between the socialist German Democratic Republic (GDR) and capitalist West
Germany. It was a physical reminder of the Iron Curtain, a metaphor used
to describe the competing idealogies and politics between the Soviet Union and
its satellite states and the West during the Cold War. During the near
three decades that the wall stood, at least 140 people died at the wall under
circumstances connected to the GDR.
When the wall fell in 1989, it
marked the first step towards German reunification and was one of a series of
events which kickstarted the fall of communism in central and eastern Europe. Fragments
of the wall still stand today, and draw thousands of visitors from across the
world to the German capital.
^ It’s important to remember how
the Berlin Wall and the Inner-German Wall impacted everyday life for East and West
Germans, for Europeans and for everyone else. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.