“Operation Vermin” was a forced resettlement operation planned by the Thuringian section of the GDR Ministry of State Security (
Stasi) and carried out by the national police force (
Volkspolizei). During this operation, between May and June 1952, citizens the government described as “smugglers, money launderers and reactionaries“ and their families were forcibly resettled from the Inner German border to the country’s interior. Reason and background for this action was the “resolution concerning measures along the demarcation line between the German Democratic Republic and the Western occupation zones of Germany” passed by the Council of Ministers on May 26, 1952 and published in issue 65 of the Federal Law Gazette on May 27, 1952. Officially, the goal was the consolidation of the Inner German border. The man in charge was Secretary of State and former Prime Minister of Thuringia,
Werner Eggerath.
Willy Gebhardt, Interior Minister and acting Prime Minister of Thuringia, supervised the execution of this operation in Thuringia. His handwritten note to Otto Funke, second chairman of the SED in Thuringia, about the number of people to be forcibly resettled into the East German interior in the course of the operation is often cited as a prime example of the inhuman or dehumanizing views of the GDR government. The note read “Otto, Gen. König just gave me these numbers. This would be the result of the Commission work to exterminate the vermin.” (
Otto, General König, hat mir gerade diese Zahlen gegeben. Dies wäre das Ergebnis der Arbeit der Kommission zur Ausrottung des Ungeziefers.) According to another account, the first wave of resettlements only received its legendary name “Operation Vermin” (
Aktion Ungeziefer) as a result of the aforementioned note, written on the final report of the resettlement operation in Thuringia for the authorities in Berlin. ==Operation Consolidation/Cornflower==