Misinformed public announcements The announcement of the regulations which brought down the Wall took place at an hour-long press conference led by
Günter Schabowski, the outgoing party leader in East Berlin and top party spokesman as Secretary for Information, beginning at 18:00 CET on 9 November and broadcast live on
East German television and
radio. Schabowski was joined by Minister of Foreign Trade
Gerhard Beil and
Central Committee members
Helga Labs and
Manfred Banaschak. Topics of the press conference included the results of votes at the Central Committee meeting, the surprising removal of SED Bezirk First Secretaries
Hans-Joachim Böhme and
Werner Walde, the SED's electoral and press reform plans and the new travel regulations. Schabowski had not been involved in the discussions about the new regulations and had not been fully updated. Shortly before the press conference, he was handed a note from Krenz announcing the changes, but given no further instructions on how to handle the information. The text stipulated that East German citizens could apply for permission to travel abroad without having to meet the previous requirements for those trips, and also allowed for permanent migration between all border crossings—including those between East and West Berlin. At 18:53, near the end of the press conference,
ANSA's
Riccardo Ehrman asked if the draft travel law of 6 November was a mistake. Schabowski gave a confusing answer that asserted it was necessary because West Germany had exhausted its capacity to accept fleeing East Germans, then remembered the note he had been given and added that a new regulation had been drafted to allow permanent emigration at any border crossing. This caused a stir in the room; amid several questions at once, Schabowski expressed surprise that the reporters had not yet seen this regulation, and started reading from the note. asked when the regulations would take effect.
The news spread The news began spreading immediately: the West German
Deutsche Presse-Agentur issued a bulletin at 19:04 which reported that East German citizens would be able to cross the inner German border "immediately". Excerpts from Schabowski's press conference were broadcast on West Germany's two main news programs that night—at 19:17 on
ZDF's
heute, which came on the air as the press conference was ending, and as the lead story at 20:00 on
ARD's
Tagesschau. As ARD and ZDF had broadcast to
nearly all of East Germany since the late 1950s, were far more widely viewed than the East German channels, and had become accepted by the East German authorities, this is how most of the population heard the news. Later that night, on ARD's
Tagesthemen, anchorman
Hanns Joachim Friedrichs proclaimed, "This 9 November is a historic day. The GDR has announced that, starting immediately, its borders are open to everyone. The gates in the Wall stand open wide."
Peace prayers at Nikolai Church in Leipzig has become a famous symbol of the reunification of Germany. Despite the policy of
state atheism in East Germany, Christian pastor
Christian Führer had regularly met with his congregation at
St. Nicholas Church for prayer since 1982.
Crowding of the border After hearing the 9 November broadcast, East Germans began gathering at the Wall, at the
six checkpoints between East and West Berlin, demanding that
border guards immediately open the gates. As the
Ossis swarmed through, they were greeted by
Wessis waiting with flowers and champagne amid wild rejoicing. Soon afterward, a crowd of West Berliners jumped on top of the Wall and were soon joined by East German youngsters. The evening of 9 November 1989 is known as the night the Wall came down. File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1989-1110-018, Berlin, Checkpoint Charlie, Nacht des Mauerfalls.jpg|Walking through
Checkpoint Charlie, 10 November 1989 File:BerlinWall-BrandenburgGate.jpg|At the
Brandenburg Gate, 10 November 1989 File:Juggling on the Berlin Wall 1a.jpg|Juggling on the Wall on 16 November 1989 File:Mauerspecht 1989.jpg|
"Mauerspecht" (November 1989) File:Berlin 1989, Fall der Mauer, Chute du mur 18.jpg|The fall of the Wall (November 1989) File:Grenzöffnung November 1989 - Selmsdorf (DDR) - Lübeck-Schlutup.webm|Celebration at the border crossing in the Schlutup district of
Lübeck Another border crossing to the south may have been opened earlier. An account by
Heinz Schäfer indicates that he also acted independently and ordered the opening of the gate at Waltersdorf-Rudow a couple of hours earlier. This may explain reports of East Berliners appearing in West Berlin earlier than the opening of the Bornholmer Straße border crossing. In the season holidays this became a sort of international action. People from all over the western world went to West Berlin and local youth provided a range of appropriate demolition tools. Television coverage of citizens demolishing sections of the Wall on 9 November was soon followed by the East German regime announcing ten new
border crossings, including the historically significant locations of
Potsdamer Platz,
Glienicker Brücke, and
Bernauer Straße. Crowds gathered on both sides of the historic crossings waiting for hours to cheer the bulldozers that tore down portions of the Wall to reconnect the divided roads. While the Wall officially remained guarded at a decreasing intensity, new border crossings continued for some time. Initially the
East German Border Troops attempted repairing the damage done by the "wallpeckers"; gradually these attempts ceased, and guards became laxer, tolerating the increasing demolitions and "unauthorized" border crossing through the holes.
Prime ministers meet The
Brandenburg Gate in the Berlin Wall was opened on 22 December 1989; on that date, West German Chancellor
Helmut Kohl walked through the gate and was greeted by East German Prime Minister
Hans Modrow. West Germans and West Berliners were allowed visa-free travel starting 23 December. Until then, they could only visit East Germany and East Berlin under restrictive conditions that involved application for a visa several days or weeks in advance and obligatory exchange of at least 25
DM per day of their planned stay, all of which hindered spontaneous visits. Thus, in the weeks between 9 November and 23 December, East Germans could actually travel more freely than Westerners.
Official demolition On 13 June 1990, the East German Border Troops officially began dismantling the Wall, beginning in
Bernauer Straße and around the Mitte district. From there, demolition continued through Prenzlauer Berg/Gesundbrunnen, Heiligensee and throughout the city of Berlin until December 1990. According to estimates by the border troops, a total of around 1.7 million tonnes of building rubble was produced by the demolition. Unofficially, the demolition of the Bornholmer Straße crossing began because of construction work on the railway. This involved a total of 300 GDR border guards and—after 3 October 1990—600 Pioneers of the Bundeswehr. These were equipped with 175 trucks, 65 cranes, 55 excavators and 13 bulldozers. Virtually every road that was severed by the Berlin Wall, every road that once linked from West Berlin to East Berlin, was reconstructed and reopened by 1 August 1990. In Berlin alone, of wall, border fence, signal systems and barrier ditches were removed. What remained were six sections that were to be preserved as a memorial. Various military units dismantled the Berlin/Brandenburg border wall, completing the job in November 1991. Painted wall segments with artistically valuable motifs were put up for auction in 1990 in
Berlin and
Monte Carlo. On 1 July 1990, the day East Germany adopted the
West German currency, all
de jure border controls ceased, although the inter-German border had become meaningless for some time before that. The demolition of the Wall was completed in 1994. Thatcher told Gorbachev: After the fall of the Berlin Wall, Mitterrand warned Thatcher that a unified Germany could make more ground than
Adolf Hitler ever had and that Europe would have to bear the consequences. ==Legacy==