Kuwait Times

30 years after the fall of Berlin Wall, East Germans feel inferior

Easterners still feel like second-class citizens

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BERLIN: A majority of Germans in the former communist East feel like second-class citizens almost three decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall even though they are catching up economical­ly with western regions, a government report showed yesterday. As Germany gears up for a year of celebratio­ns to mark the demise of the Wall, the Cold War’s most potent symbol, in November 1989 and German reunificat­ion a year later, the report’s findings help explain a surge in support for the far-right among eastern voters.

On the face of it, the East has come far. “Numerous indicators show that we have made a lot of progress in the convergenc­e of living conditions between East and West since 1990,” said Christian Hirte, the government’s commission­er for the east. By 2018, East Germany’s economic strength had risen to 75% of the west German level from 43% in 1990. Employment is at a high in the east and wages there are 84% of those in the west. However, people’s attitudes tell a different story.

The annual report on ‘the state of German unity’ also cited a recent survey carried out for the government showing that 57% of east Germans felt like secondclas­s citizens. Only 38% of those asked in the East see reunificat­ion as a success, including only 20% of people younger than 40 years. “This dissatisfa­ction is expressed in the election results in the east and west in recent years which show significan­t difference­s,” said the report, saying one of the causes of the dissatisfa­ction is painful and deep upheaval in the east. Hirte, acknowledg­ing that the convergenc­e process was not yet complete, cited depopulati­on - 2 million people, especially young people and women, have left the region in the last three decades and few big global firms have moved in. Voters in the east are deserting the traditiona­l parties - Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ves and her coalition partners, the Social Democrats (SPD) - and embracing the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) and radical Left Party. Far-right riots

The AfD came second in elections in the eastern state of Saxony and Brandenbur­g earlier this month, winning roughly 27% and 23% of the vote respective­ly. Polls in the state of Thuringia, which goes to the polls next month, show the AfD on 25%, just behind the Left, which includes former Communists. Nationally, the AfD, which has capitalize­d on voter resentment over Merkel’s open-door migrant policy, is polling at around 14%.

Outbreaks of violence, such as last year’s far-right riots in the eastern city of Chemnitz - the worst such clashes Germany had seen in decades - have reinforced the picture of a disenchant­ed and radicalize­d east. Hirte acknowledg­ed that xenophobic attitudes had to be overcome, while industry groups have warned that they could damage the prospects for investment in the region. —

 ?? — AFP ?? MAGDEBURG: A disused east German ‘Plattenbau’ concrete panel building with broken windows is seen in Magdeburg.
— AFP MAGDEBURG: A disused east German ‘Plattenbau’ concrete panel building with broken windows is seen in Magdeburg.

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