BERLIN: The East German official who inadvertently announced the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 died Sunday aged 86, media reported.
The former spokesman of the Politburo central committee of East Germany’s ruling communist party, Guenter Schabowski, died in the reunified capital, his widow told news agency DPA. His death came just days before the 26th anniversary of the joyous border opening.
After months of mass protests against regime in 1989 and amid a widening exodus of citizens to the West via Hungary, the Politburo asked the government to prepare a law loosening restrictions on travel outside E.Germany.
It was nearly 7:00 p.m. on Nov. 9 when Schabowski pulled a sheet of paper from his pocket and read out a decree stating that visas would be freely granted to those wanting to travel outside or leave the Stalinist state.
“As of when?” asked an Italian journalist. Schabowski hesitated and then improvized: “As far as I know... as of now.”
The press conference was carried live by television networks and within minutes news bulletins were proclaiming that “The Wall has fallen.” Thousands of East Berliners started streaming towards checkpoints leading to West Berlin, where baffled East German border guards, unsure what to do, kept phoning for instructions.
Eventually as the crowds grew ever larger, one barrier went up and bewildered East Berliners, who had been unable to cross freely for 28 years, staggered into the West.
Less than one year later, on Oct. 3, 1990, East and West Germany reunited as one country, ending four decades of Cold War division.
The man who announced fall of Berlin Wall dead
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