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- <text id=89TT2711>
- <title>
- Oct. 16, 1989: Refugees:Freedom Train
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Oct. 16, 1989 The Ivory Trail
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 38
- REFUGEES
- Freedom Train
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As thousands of its citizens flee to the West, East Germany
- celebrates a bitter 40th birthday
- </p>
- <p>By William R. Doerner
- </p>
- <p> The timing of Mikhail Gorbachev's visit to East Germany
- could not have been more awkward. On the 40th anniversary of
- the country's founding as a separate socialist state, the
- government in East Berlin found itself utterly humiliated. Like
- storm-besieged dikes, the borders of the country had sprung one
- leak after another, and thousands of refugees were pouring out.
- The routine anniversary visit threatened to turn into another
- diplomatic nightmare for the Soviet President, fraught with the
- kind of tensions and prodemocracy demonstrations that marred his
- trip to China last spring. It was Gorbachev's message of change,
- after all, that had largely inspired the freedom flight.
- </p>
- <p> But through a combination of cautious diplomacy on
- Gorbachev's part and careful crowd control by his hosts, the
- two-day visit went off without any major embarrassments.
- Arriving at Schonefeld Airport on Friday, the Soviet leader was
- greeted with enthusiastic cries of "Gorbi! Gorbi!" but the
- reception remained calm. About 3,000 people gathered the next
- day in Alexanderplatz to demand government reform, the biggest
- such demonstration in East Berlin since 1953, but again the
- police managed to control the crowd. Officials were less
- successful in keeping the lid on demonstrations outside the
- capital: in Dresden and Leipzig violent clashes between
- protesters and police continued throughout the weekend.
- </p>
- <p> In public statements Gorbachev walked a fine line between
- encouraging reform and offering support for Erich Honecker,
- East Germany's aged and embattled leader. Wading into a crowd
- with characteristic aplomb, the Soviet visitor urged patience.
- "Don't panic. Don't get depressed. We'll go on fighting together
- for socialism." He made a strong show of solidarity with
- Honecker, standing shoulder to shoulder with him as they
- reviewed a torchlight parade. When he alluded to the current
- crisis in a televised address, Gorbachev took pains to be
- circumspect. "We know our German friends well," he said. "We
- know their ability to think creatively, to learn from life and
- to make changes when necessary."
- </p>
- <p> But those measured words came too late for the East Germans
- who had already opted to make a run for a better life in the
- West. Last week alone some 8,200 fled, raising the total number
- of refugees over the past five months to 50,000. Some jumped at
- the opportunity without a moment's hesitation, others agonized
- over it. "We talked about it way into the night for days on
- end," said Christiane Weinbauer of Halle, who joined the exodus
- with her husband last week. "One minute we had decided to go,
- and the next we were staying for the sake of our relatives or
- the children or for reasons of security. Then we heard on a West
- German radio station that the people in the embassy in Prague
- were being taken to the West. It was Saturday night. We stayed
- up talking again, and by early morning we were packing. We had
- finally made up our minds."
- </p>
- <p> So had enough other young men, women and children to turn
- a trickle of refugees into a torrent, pouring out of every crack
- they could find in the crumbling Iron Curtain. The first route,
- through Hungary, has largely shut down since East German
- officials cut back on exit permits to that country a month ago.
- Next, East Germans by the thousands planted themselves in the
- West German embassy in Prague, as Czechoslovakia was the only
- country to which they were allowed to travel without an exit
- permit. Those who could slip into Poland converged on Bonn's
- compound in Warsaw. And when special trains carrying the
- refugees to West Germany were routed back through their
- homeland, near riots resulted. Dozens clambered over fences,
- lunged at the passing cars and climbed aboard, convinced that
- the moving trains offered the last opportunity to get out.
- </p>
- <p> The illegal exodus has been going on since May, when
- Hungary began clipping the barbed wire separating the East bloc
- from Austria. But nothing dramatized the crisis so vividly --
- or posed the hard questions for East Germany so immediately --
- as the swarm of tents packed with would-be emigres overflowing
- the embassy compound in Prague. Last Tuesday, after the first
- freedom trains had rolled out of Prague, Honecker sealed off the
- country's border to Czechoslovakia, leaving East Germans
- isolated and caged once more. There were signs late in the week,
- however, that restrictions on emigration might be eased,
- according to West German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich
- Genscher.
- </p>
- <p> The paradox is that East Germany's 40th birthday party
- should have been a glorious moment for the 77-year-old Honecker.
- Largely because of his grimly orthodox leadership, "Honi" could
- boast of giving the German Democratic Republic the strongest
- economy, the finest industry and one of the best-fed,
- best-housed and best-educated populations in the East bloc. It
- was the world's most successful -- or least unsuccessful --
- example of Marxist government.
- </p>
- <p> The refugees' flight seemed not only a dramatic act of
- rejection by his own people but also a challenge to the
- legitimacy -- and perhaps the very existence -- of Honecker's
- country. Beneath the flags and banners, East Germans are
- increasingly questioning who and what they are -- and not liking
- the answers. Those who have made their way to the West since the
- beginning of the year have done so not out of material
- desperation or fear of persecution but in blunt renunciation of
- the East German system. "It is a suffocating place, and we
- didn't see any chance of the present regime's changing," said
- Karl Weinbauer as he waited, dirty and cold, in Prague.
- </p>
- <p> Many who stay behind share the same anger and frustration.
- "People are leaving East Germany because they have lost all
- hope of change, because the Communists are closed to
- Gorbachev's policies of glasnost and perestroika," said Reinhard
- Schult, one of the founders of the biggest new opposition
- movement, New Forum. "We can no longer tolerate the kindergarten
- atmosphere or being constantly led by the nose on all fronts."
- </p>
- <p> Few expect things to get better under Honecker. And though
- in failing health, he shows no signs of turning power over to
- the next generation. While their neighbors in Poland and Hungary
- rush to embrace the reforms of perestroika and glasnost, East
- Germany's aged chieftains have stoutly withstood all
- blandishments, even from Gorbachev, to abandon the strict
- orthodoxies of conventional Communism. The result: a country so
- calcified that its citizens find a hopeful future only in
- flight.
- </p>
- <p> So far this year, more than 110,000 East Germans have left,
- far and away the most since the Berlin Wall went up in 1961.
- Slightly more than half have departed with official permission,
- a sign that the Honecker regime has been forced to relax its
- policy of limiting emigration to the elderly and a few political
- dissidents. According to West German officials, some 1.8 million
- East Germans -- more than 10% of the population -- have applied
- to leave, despite the risk of job and educational
- discrimination.
- </p>
- <p> But growing numbers refuse to wait for permission. In
- August and September, more than 30,000 vacationers took
- advantage of the newly opened border between Hungary and Austria
- to cross into West Germany. East Berlin tightened controls on
- travel to Hungary, yet new refugees continue to slip over at the
- rate of 200 to 500 a day. Hungary has rejected any suggestion
- that it close its borders.
- </p>
- <p> Last week it was Prague's turn to play host to the refugee
- hordes. As East Germany's closest ally within the bloc,
- Czechoslovakia had long been deemed a safe foreign destination.
- Last year some 4 million East Germans, a quarter of the entire
- population, crossed into Czechoslovakia on vacation trips.
- Prague's hard-line regime demonstrated its reliability on the
- refugee issue by discouraging East German travel to neighboring
- Hungary at the height of the exodus there.
- </p>
- <p> As the easy exit through Hungary all but closed, a sense of
- desperation spurred more departures. East German visitors to
- Prague began moving onto the grounds of the former Lobkowitz
- palace, a baroque edifice that serves as West Germany's embassy.
- There they joined several hundred other East Germans who had
- been living at the embassy for as long as two months waiting for
- permission to leave for West Germany. The ranks of the occupiers
- swelled steadily to 5,000. Their tents and blankets covered
- virtually every square inch of a football-field-size garden in
- back of the embassy, and hundreds more slept on floors inside.
- The plots of ground not covered were churned to mud by constant
- foot traffic, and bathroom facilities were hopelessly overrun.
- </p>
- <p> Still they came, and as more and more East Germans clogged
- the streets around the embassy, overwhelmed officials sought a
- diplomatic solution. On Sept. 30, West German Foreign Minister
- Genscher arrived in Prague with word that the two Germanys had
- agreed to transport the emigres to the West. They left the next
- day.
- </p>
- <p> But under terms dictated by the Honecker regime, the
- special refugee trains were required to travel back through East
- German territory before depositing their human cargo in Bavaria.
- The face-saving yet ultimately self-defeating scheme was
- designed to permit authorities to engage in the fiction that
- they were "expelling" disloyal citizens. In the end, this petty
- legalism only encouraged more to flee. As the freedom trains
- slowed along hills and at curves, daring East Germans hopped
- aboard and joined the flight to the West.
- </p>
- <p> That solution proved astonishingly short-lived. Within a
- few hours of the first transfer, new arrivals began showing up
- at the Prague embassy, many of them drawn by news of the safe
- passage of the first group. East Germany, believing that its
- agreement was for a once-only exodus, reacted angrily to Bonn's
- decision to allow more refugees into the compound.
- </p>
- <p> Barely recovered from gallbladder surgery, Honecker went on
- TV to accuse Bonn of trying "to turn East Germany upside down
- with a comprehensive attack." West Germany flatly denied that
- it had reneged on a pledge to shut its doors to new refugees.
- "There was no such agreement," said Foreign Ministry spokesman
- Jurgen Chrobog. "We would never accept that German people should
- stand outside a German embassy with small children without
- giving shelter and care. The East Germans wanted to build a wall
- around our embassy. Now they're building a wall around
- themselves."
- </p>
- <p> Day after day new throngs poured in. There were so many
- abandoned Trabant and Wartburg automobiles on Prague streets
- that police began towing away any vehicle with East German
- stickers on it. On Tuesday, Ambassador Hermann Huber ordered the
- embassy gates closed when the refugee population had reached
- 5,000, then hours later, as the night turned bitterly cold,
- reopened them to families with children. A new round of
- departures was scheduled and then delayed. East German
- officials, moreover, insisted that the second group of trains
- make the trip from Prague to the West German city of Hof at
- night, rendering it more difficult for hitchhikers to board.
- </p>
- <p> Some trains did pass through Dresden, where up to 15,000
- besieged the city's main train station, only to be driven back
- by police wielding clubs and water cannons. The crowd, which
- included casual onlookers as well as those trying to get on the
- trains, overturned police vehicles and pelted police with rocks.
- A total of 7,600 East Germans from Prague reached safety in Hof
- the next morning, and 600 more arrived from Warsaw the following
- day, bringing to 15,000 the total evacuated since the embassy
- occupations began.
- </p>
- <p> East Germany's decision to permit the mass departures was
- almost certainly occasioned by the approaching national
- anniversary. But the larger dilemma remains unresolved. New
- travel restrictions do not address the root causes of widespread
- popular disaffection in East Germany. "It's like taking an
- aspirin for a toothache," said a Western diplomat in Prague. "It
- may relieve the pain, but it won't fix the problem." As the
- rioting in Dresden made only too clear, the refugees who had the
- good luck to act are hardly the only ones who want out. In
- Leipzig, 10,000 East Germans marched through the streets
- demanding change and shouting the name of the man who inspires
- them: "Gorbi! Gorbi!"
- </p>
- <p> Things are unraveling fast for the East German regime. Some
- Western analysts fear a longer-term crackdown, but that would
- merely increase internal pressure, not diminish it. In the long
- run, Honecker, or his successors, will be forced into reform.
- Yet steps toward democracy and a free-market economy pose a
- special peril for the G.D.R. If East Germany became more like
- West Germany, what would be the point of a separate state?
- </p>
- <p>--John Borrell/Prague and James O. Jackson/Berlin
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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