Former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev makes an impression with his hands in cement as he visits the former Berlin Wall border crossing point Checkpoint Charlie. He warned that the world is “on the brink of a new Cold War” at an event to mark 25 years since the wall fell. Photo: Hannibal Hanschke/ReutersFormer Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev makes an impression with his hands in cement as he visits the former Berlin Wall border crossing point Checkpoint Charlie. He warned that the world is “on the brink of a new Cold War” at an event to mark 25 years since the wall fell. Photo: Hannibal Hanschke/Reuters

Germany today celebrates the 25th anniversary of the night the Berlin Wall fell, a pivotal moment in the collapse of communism and the start of the country’s emergence as the major power at the heart of Europe.

A 15-kilometer chain of lighted balloons along the former border will be released into the air in the evening – around the time on November 9, 1989, when a garbled announcement by a senior communist official set off the chain of events that brought down the Cold War’s most potent symbol.

The opening of East Germany’s fortified frontier capped months of ferment that had already ushered in Poland’s first post-communist prime minister and prompted Hungary to cut open its border fence. The hard-line leadership in East Berlin faced mounting pressure from huge protests and an exodus of citizens via other communist countries.

The collapse of the Wall, which had divided the city for 28 years, was “a point of no return ... from there, things headed toward a whole new world order,” said Axel Klausmeier, the director of the city’s main Wall memorial.

Chancellor Angela Merkel, who grew up in East Germany, is opening an overhauled museum today at the site – home to one of the few surviving sections of the Wall.

Merkel, 60, who was then a physicist and entered politics as communism crumbled, recalls the feeling of being stuck behind East Germany’s border.

The installation Lichtgrenze (Border of Light) along a former Berlin Wall location is illuminated next to the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin last Friday.The installation Lichtgrenze (Border of Light) along a former Berlin Wall location is illuminated next to the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin last Friday.

“Even today when I walk through the Brandenburg Gate, there’s a residual feeling that this wasn’t possible for many years of my life, and that I had to wait 35 years to have this feeling of freedom,” Merkel said last week. “That changed my life.”

The future chancellor was among the thousands who poured westward hours after the ruling Politburo’s spokesman, Guenter Schabowski, off-handedly announced at a televised news conference that East Germans would be allowed to travel to West Germany and West Berlin.

Pressed on when that would take effect, Schabowski seemed uncertain but said: “To my knowledge, this is immediately, without delay.” Soon, Western media reported that East Germany was opening the border and East Berliners were jamming the first crossing.

Border guards had received no orders to let anyone cross, but gave up trying to hold back the crowds. By midnight, all the border crossings in the city were open.

East Germany’s then-leader, Egon Krenz, later said the plan was to allow free travel only the next morning so citizens could line up properly to get exit visas. But with the leadership’s control over the border well and truly lost, Germany was soon on the road to reunification less than a year later, on October 3, 1990.

Since then, some €1.5 to 2 trillion has gone into rebuilding the once-dilapidated east. Much has changed beyond recognition, though some inequalities persist.

But the progress toward true unity is seen in Germany’s top leadership: Not only is Merkel from the east, but so is the nation’s president, Joachim Gauck, a former Protestant pastor and pro-democracy activist.

Gorbachev accuses the US

Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev said tensions between the major powers have put the world “on the brink of a new Cold War”.

He accuses the West, particularly the United States, of giving in to “triumphalism” after the collapse of the communist bloc a quarter of a century ago. Gorbachev spoke yesterday at an event marking the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, close to the city's Brandenburg Gate.

Gorbachev called for new trust to be built through dialogue with Moscow, and suggested the West should lift sanctions imposed against senior Russian officials over its actions in eastern Ukraine. He says failure to achieve security in Europe would make the continent irrelevant in world affairs.

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