Tiananmen Square protests East Germans could see news about the
Tiananmen Square democracy demonstration between April and June 1989 on West German television broadcasts. When the Chinese regime brutally crushed the demonstration on 3–4 June, several hundred and possibly several thousand protesters were killed. This caused concern for the nascent East German protest movement, that had demonstrated against electoral fraud in May. "We too feared the possibility of a 'Chinese solution,'" said Pastor
Christian Fuehrer of the
Nikolaikirche in Leipzig. The
Neues Deutschland, the official newspaper of the
SED, supported the crackdown by the Chinese authorities. The
German People's Congress proclaimed it was "a defeat for counter-revolutionary forces." Sixteen civil rights activists in East Berlin were arrested for protesting against the actions of the Chinese government. Although there were almost 500,000 Soviet troops stationed in the GDR, they were not going to help suppress any demonstrations. It later emerged that Gorbachev had ordered that the troops were to stay in their barracks during the commemorations. As the reformist Gorbachev was paraded along
Unter den Linden, cheering crowds lining the street called out "Gorbi, Gorbi," and "Gorbi, help us." However, there were still fears of a Tiananmen Square-style crackdown, as on 2 October, the SED party official
Egon Krenz was in
Beijing, at the anniversary of the founding of
People's Republic of China. There, he said, "In the struggles of our time, the GDR and China stand side by side." who beat and hurt people up and made around 500 arrests. Other protests outside the
Palace of the Republic were also brutally repressed. There were protests throughout the country, the most organised being three consecutive demonstrations in
Saxony on 7, 8 and 9 October in
Plauen,
Dresden and Leipzig respectively. In Leipzig, there was no violence, as the 70,000 participants were too many for the 8,000 armed security forces present to tackle. "The message from Leipzig soared over the entire country: The masses had the power to topple the regime peacefully". When numerous East Germans were arrested for protesting the 40th-anniversary celebrations, many of them sang "
The Internationale" in police custody to imply that they, rather than their captors, were the real revolutionaries. On 18 October, only eleven days after these events, Honecker was removed as head of the party and the state and was replaced by Egon Krenz.
Weekly demonstrations In addition to the GDR 40th anniversary demonstrations and the protests against electoral fraud, from September 1989 there were regular weekly pro-democracy demonstrations in towns and cities across the country. They are referred to as "Monday demonstrations" as that was the day they occurred in Leipzig, where they started, but they were staged on several days of the week. In
Erfurt, for example, they happened on Thursdays. The first wave of these was from 4 September 1989 to March 1990. They continued sporadically until 1991. The protesters called for an open border with West Germany, genuine democracy, and greater human rights and environmental protections. Churches were often pivotal in the demonstrations. The Leipzig "Monday demonstrations" stemmed from Monday prayer meetings at the
Nikolaikirche (Church of St Nicholas). Prayers were said for people who had been mistreated by the state authorities, so the meetings took on a political character. The numbers attending grew and on 4 September 1989, it became a demonstration of over 1000 people in front of the church. The Stasi arrived to break it up, taking some demonstrators away in trucks. in East Berlin, 4 November 1989 The demonstrations became a regular weekly event in Leipzig and around the country, with tens of thousands joining in. There were mass arrests and beatings at the Leipzig demonstrations on 11 September and going through until 2 October. After the demonstration on 9 October, in which the security forces were completely outnumbered by the 70,000 protesters and unable to hinder them, the demonstrations in Leipzig and elsewhere remained relatively peaceful. On the 28 October 1989, to try to calm the protests, an amnesty was issued for political prisoners being held for border crimes or for participation in the weekly demonstrations. The first wave of demonstrations ended in March 1990 due to the forthcoming free
parliamentary elections on 18 March. On 8 October 1989, Mielke and Honecker ordered the Stasi to implement "Plan X"—the SED's plan to arrest and indefinitely detain 85,939 East Germans during a
state of emergency. According to John Koehler, Plan X had been in preparation since 1979 and was, "a
carbon copy of how the
Nazi concentration camps got their start after
Hitler came to power in 1933." By 1984, 23 sites had been selected for "isolation and internment camps." Those who were to be imprisoned in them ran into six categories, including anyone who had ever been under surveillance for anti-state activities, including all members of peace movements which were not under Stasi control. According to Anna Funder, "The plans contained exact provisions for the use of all available prisons and camps, and when those were full for the conversion of other buildings: Nazi detention centers, schools, hospitals, and factory holiday hostels. Every detail was foreseen, from where the doorbell was located on the house of each person to be arrested to the adequate supply of barbed wire and the rules of dress and etiquette in the camps..." However, when Mielke sent the orders, codenamed "Shield" (),
The GDR's last-ditch secret plan to avert bankruptcy On October 31, 1989, the Politbüro of the Central Committee of the SED discussed a top-secret "Schürer-Paper", which proposed offering the opening of the Berlin Wall as a last bargaining chip to the Federal Republic of Germany to obtain urgently needed credits and expanded economic cooperation, thereby averting a looming decline in living standards and state bankruptcy. The
MfS Department (National Economy/HA XVIII) also confirmed that this was the only way to prevent the collapse of the GDR.
Ruling party starts to lose power On 18 October 1989, the 77-year-old Erich Honecker was replaced as the
General Secretary of the Socialist Unity Party by Egon Krenz. After the vote to oust Honecker passed,
Stasi chief
Erich Mielke "got nasty," and accused Honecker of
political corruption. Honecker responded that Mielke should not open his mouth so much. Mielke responded by putting the last nail in Honecker's coffin. He announced that the Stasi had a file on the now-ousted leader. It contained proof of Honecker's corrupt business practices, sexual activities, and how, as a member of the underground
Communist Party of Germany during the Nazi years, he had been arrested by the
Gestapo and had named names. The
Politburo of the SED remained the real holders of political power. Over 200,000 members of the SED had left the party during the previous two months.
Hans Modrow became the prime minister and 17 November he formed a 28-member Council of Minister which included 11 non-SED ministers. Krenz, the last SED leader of the GDR, was only in office for 46 days, resigning on 3 December, along with the rest of the SED Politburo and the
Central Committee of the party. The country was then in practice run by Prime Minister Modrow.
Fall of the Berlin Wall and border opening border crossing in
Thuringia, 10 November 1989, as East Germans visit West Germany After Hungary and Czechoslovakia allowed East Germans to cross to the west via their borders, there was nothing the GDR government could to do to prevent people leaving. Between 4–5 November, the weekend before the Berlin Wall was opened, over 50,000 people left. Party official
Günter Schabowski announced at a press conference on the evening of Thursday 9 November 1989 that East Germans were free to travel through the checkpoints of the Berlin Wall and the
inner German border. After some initial confusion, with 20,000 people arriving at the
Bornholmer Straße border crossing by 11.30 p.m., chanting "Open the gate",
Harald Jäger, a border official, allowed people to pass through into West Berlin. Over the next few days streams of cars queued at the checkpoints along the Berlin Wall and the inner German border to travel through to West Germany. == Die Wende ==