Dubai Telegraph - Sixty years ago: when the Berlin Wall went up

EUR -
AED 3.843685
AFN 77.423228
ALL 98.991341
AMD 412.46392
ANG 1.886635
AOA 958.556336
ARS 1108.465738
AUD 1.646152
AWG 1.883625
AZN 1.783134
BAM 1.955629
BBD 2.113615
BDT 127.188874
BGN 1.955629
BHD 0.394665
BIF 3100.228812
BMD 1.046458
BND 1.399278
BOB 7.233367
BRL 5.998723
BSD 1.046808
BTN 90.393093
BWP 14.40974
BYN 3.4259
BYR 20510.585864
BZD 2.102816
CAD 1.489686
CDF 3003.336166
CHF 0.939704
CLF 0.025745
CLP 987.943581
CNY 7.587913
CNH 7.589571
COP 4267.526704
CRC 528.753748
CUC 1.046458
CUP 27.731149
CVE 110.255356
CZK 25.074509
DJF 186.413694
DKK 7.460835
DOP 65.234294
DZD 141.056661
EGP 52.899373
ERN 15.696877
ETB 131.860866
FJD 2.401313
FKP 0.82828
GBP 0.828517
GEL 2.934124
GGP 0.82828
GHS 16.160219
GIP 0.82828
GMD 75.344692
GNF 9044.005264
GTQ 8.070129
GYD 218.692808
HKD 8.130815
HNL 26.789585
HRK 7.537226
HTG 139.155956
HUF 403.18961
IDR 17063.966206
ILS 3.737165
IMP 0.82828
INR 90.613797
IQD 1371.182606
IRR 43954.056561
ISK 145.722785
JEP 0.82828
JMD 164.541627
JOD 0.74198
JPY 156.223172
KES 135.764577
KGS 91.512818
KHR 4188.462851
KMF 492.202299
KPW 941.790882
KRW 1501.261064
KWD 0.323145
KYD 0.858086
KZT 528.878539
LAK 22673.703303
LBP 93713.725573
LKR 309.422132
LRD 207.425722
LSL 19.196785
LTL 3.08992
LVL 0.632993
LYD 5.120608
MAD 10.413363
MDL 19.394452
MGA 4935.655073
MKD 61.369495
MMK 2197.310825
MNT 3624.0035
MOP 8.374641
MRU 41.925095
MUR 48.116341
MVR 16.177754
MWK 1813.919734
MXN 21.369077
MYR 4.623993
MZN 66.545245
NAD 19.196785
NGN 1569.320164
NIO 38.325265
NOK 11.66931
NPR 145.050035
NZD 1.822638
OMR 0.402887
PAB 1.046458
PEN 3.857765
PGK 4.206801
PHP 60.564182
PKR 292.461971
PLN 4.160412
PYG 8297.223971
QAR 3.8095
RON 4.979089
RSD 117.239079
RUB 92.574395
RWF 1463.22504
SAR 3.924609
SBD 8.823426
SCR 15.586799
SDG 626.787085
SEK 11.139357
SGD 1.398286
SHP 0.831543
SLE 23.796854
SLL 21943.716629
SOS 598.013143
SRD 37.129642
STD 21659.577382
SVC 9.156898
SYP 13605.901332
SZL 19.196785
THB 35.1049
TJS 11.411582
TMT 3.66284
TND 3.306799
TOP 2.493373
TRY 38.155278
TTD 7.110079
TWD 34.339117
TZS 2684.435336
UAH 43.792574
UGX 3840.377743
USD 1.046458
UYU 45.155429
UZS 13526.323775
VES 66.270511
VND 26700.208973
VUV 128.607342
WST 2.930417
XAF 656.269732
XAG 0.032128
XAU 0.000356
XCD 2.825389
XDR 0.797113
XOF 656.269732
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.248992
ZAR 19.220967
ZMK 9419.385666
ZMW 29.687045
ZWL 336.959198
  • SCS

    -0.1200

    12.31

    -0.97%

  • RELX

    -1.1200

    49.29

    -2.27%

  • NGG

    0.2100

    61.31

    +0.34%

  • RIO

    -0.7600

    63.53

    -1.2%

  • RBGPF

    65.4200

    65.42

    +100%

  • GSK

    0.0807

    36.64

    +0.22%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    23.37

    -0.13%

  • BP

    -0.2800

    33.89

    -0.83%

  • BTI

    -0.7000

    37.85

    -1.85%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    7.7

    -1.69%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    23.97

    +1.67%

  • BCC

    -9.4800

    107

    -8.86%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    8.36

    +1.2%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.8

    -0.16%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.42

    -0.21%

  • AZN

    0.7100

    74.22

    +0.96%

Sixty years ago: when the Berlin Wall went up
Sixty years ago: when the Berlin Wall went up

Sixty years ago: when the Berlin Wall went up

In the early hours of Sunday, August 13, 1961, communist East Germany's authorities began building the Berlin Wall, cutting the city in two and plugging the last remaining gap in the Iron Curtain.

Text size:

Rumours that the border between East and West Berlin was about to be closed had been swirling for 48 hours.

On Friday, the parliament or People's Chamber of communist German Democratic Republic (GDR) had given the green light to take any measures necessary to halt the exodus of its population westwards.

Over the preceding 12 years, more than three million citizens had fled the strict regime, opting for the freedom and prosperity offered by West Germany.

- News flashes -

At 4:01 am on that Sunday, a top priority AFP flash dated Berlin hit the wire: "The army and Volkspolizei are massing at the edge of the Eastern and Western sectors of Berlin to block passage."

In a second flash, the story was firmed up. "Berlin's metropolitan trains have for the past two hours not been going from one sector to the other."

Then one flash after another fell:

- 4:28 am: "The GDR's Council of Ministers has decided to put in place at its borders, even at those with the western sector of Berlin, the checks usual at borders of a sovereign state."

- 4:36 am: "An order from the East German interior ministry forbids the country's inhabitants to go to East Berlin if they do not work there."

- 4:50 am: "Inhabitants of East Berlin are forbidden to work in West Berlin, according to a decision by the East Berlin city authorities."

- Barbed wire and guns -

In the very early morning, AFP's correspondent at the scene described the situation on the ground.

"Barbed wire fences and defensive spikes have been put in place overnight to hermetically seal the border between East Berlin and West Berlin.

"The road is practically cut off for refugees.

"Most of the crossing points between the two sides of the city have been cut off since sunrise and are heavily guarded by the police patrolling with machine guns on their shoulders.

"Only 13 border crossings remain open between the two Berlins, controlled by numerous reinforced units of armed police.

- Dramatic escape -

"Germans from East Berlin can no longer go to the West without a special pass, the controls are excessively strict.

"As the net falls over the communist part of the city, a young Berliner from the East manages against all odds to ram with his car the barbed wire separating the two sectors of the city.

"Seeing the young man arriving at high speed in a Volkswagen, the police were too taken off guard to be able to stop the car, which carried the barbed wire placed across the street right to the French sector," AFP wrote.

- 'Death strip'-

Little by little, the kilometres of barbed wire will give way to a 43- kilometre-long (27-mile-long) concrete wall cutting the city in two from north to south.

Another outer wall, 112 kilometres (70 miles) long, cuts off the enclave of West Berlin and its two million inhabitants from the GDR.

Constantly upgraded over its 28 years of existence, more than 100 kilometres (60 miles) of the wall is made up of slabs of reinforced concrete, 3.60 metres (12 feet) high, crowned with a cylinder without a grip making it almost impossible to climb.

The remainder is made of metal wire.

Along the eastern side of what is widely called the "wall of shame" stands a "no man's land", 300 metres (990 feet) deep in places.

At the foot of the wall a "death strip" made up of carefully raked ground to make it possible to spot footprints, is equipped with installations that set off automatic gunfire and mines.

However hermetic this formidable "anti-fascist protection rampart", as it was officially known, would be, it would not prevent the escape of nearly 5,000 people until it fell on November 9, 1989. Around 100 fugitives lost their lives trying to cross over.

B.Krishnan--DT