icNorthWales - Berlin Wall collapse celebrated
icNorthWales logo
icNorthWales Daily Post Motors Homes Jobs Wales Dating Yr Herald
Search icNorthWales for:


Berlin Wall collapse celebrated

09:05, Nov 9 2009

 

Celebrations have enveloped Germany on the 20th anniversary of the night the Berlin Wall came down - signalling the beginning of the end of communism in Europe.

Led by Chancellor Angela Merkel and featuring a panoply of European, US and Russian leaders -- current and former -- Germany and its citizens were set to celebrate the historical watershed with concerts by Bon Jovi and Beethoven.

There will also be memorials to the 136 lives lost of those who tried to cross the nearly 100-mile long barrier that cut Berlin in two and stood as the most visible reminder of what was then an intractable, seemingly endless Cold War between the West and East.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that "the ideals that drove Berliners to tear down that wall are no less relevant today. The freedoms championed then are no less precious".

Several leaders were arriving in Berlin to take part in ceremonies, including the heads of state of all 27 EU members, Russian president Dmitri Medvedev.

An estimated 100,000 people were expected to gather in front of the Brandenburg Gate, the iconic gateway that once stood in the midst of no man's land, surrounded by the wall, barbed wire and machine guns.

Instead of border guards and tense emotion, the gate will be the site of music, speeches and fireworks, harkening back to the night of November 9, 1989, when people danced atop the Berlin Wall, feet thudding on the cold concrete, arms raised in victory, hands clasped in friendship and giddy hope.

On that cold night, years of separation and anxiety melted into the unbelievable reality of freedom and a future without border guards, secret police, informers and rigid communist control.

In an interview in Moscow former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev said the collapse was a catalyst for peace.

"No matter how hard it was, we worked, we found mutual understanding and we moved forward. We started cutting down nuclear weapons, scaling down the armed forces in Europe and resolving other issues," he said.

 

Top Top | Back Back |

E-mail to a friend | Printable version

 
Top North Wales headlines

  • Sickening
  • £100m complex is criticised
  • Labour's control dwindles
  • Man guilty of harassing wife after separation
  • Protest group aim to stop lorry park site
  • Site bid will 'go a long way' to help
  • Anger as arsonists destroy classroom
  • Appeal blow for furious villagers
  • Armed raiders wield knives in pub attack
  • Children's group loses funding
  • Top UK and world headlines

  • 'More families' covering bills
  • Syria army general assassinated
  • Eight held in corruption probe
  • Man quizzed over village murder
  • Man held after restaurant stand-off
  • Mercury plummets to winter low

  •  

    Copyright and Trade Mark Notice
    © 2012 owned by or licensed to Trinity Mirror North West & North Wales Limited.
    icNorthWales™ is a trade mark of Trinity Mirror North West & North Wales Limited.
    Please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Statement before using this site.
     

    Choose from 1000's of properties on our database

    Find a car or view the latest Road Tests

    Choose from 1000's of vacancies on our database

    ALL the latest from the world of business

    Farm and Country For farmers and everyone who cares about the countryside

    Welsh National Team Logo ALL the latest news from the Welsh National football team