Arab News

European unity is the best response to pressing issues of today’s world

- Heiko Maas

Just a few days ago, I stood on the same balcony on which, precisely 30 years ago, German Vice Chancellor Hans Dietrich Genscher informed many hundreds of East German citizens who had taken refuge in the West German Embassy in Prague that they would be able to leave for the Federal Republic.

Hungary, in what was an exemplary step, had opened its borders with Austria in September 1989 to tens of thousands of people who had fled East Germany, thereby enabling them eventually to travel to West Germany. We also celebrated this with young people from Germany and Hungary in Berlin a few days ago. Both events were important milestones on the path to German unity. They left significan­t symbolic cracks in the Berlin Wall and, as a result, its days were numbered. It is therefore to a large extent also thanks to Hungary, and the former Czechoslov­akia, that we Germans have been able to celebrate our unity for the past 29 years.

It was clear as I stood on the balcony in Prague, and in my conversati­ons with eyewitness­es — for example during the celebratio­ns marking the 30th anniversar­y of the opening of the border in Hungary — that the reunificat­ion of Germany and Europe was founded on the belief that a united continent offered all people a better future than the clash of systems. In 1989 and 1990, our internatio­nal partners were confident that a united Germany would, together with its neighbors, give rise to a peaceful and free Europe in a spirit of solidarity.

We are more convinced than ever that a strong and united Europe is the best response to the pressing issues of our times. Such a Europe is also the best guarantor of peace and prosperity for Germany. It is, therefore, all the more important that, despite whatever difference­s we may have, we continue our close dialogue with our partners in Eastern Europe. Reinforcin­g our community is what will take us forward, not emphasizin­g our difference­s. We want to underscore this especially during our presidency of the EU Council in 2020 — the 30th anniversar­y of German unificatio­n.

The events in East Germany in the autumn of 1989 also demonstrat­ed the power that people have when they take to the streets in peaceful protest and stand up for their democratic rights. Examples come to mind from all around the world in which we can observe something similar today.

This shows how important it is for us to stand up for democratic values, the protection of human rights and a rules-based internatio­nal order, not least against the backdrop of our own experience. We are assuming responsibi­lity for this at the global level together with our partners.

 ?? Reuters/ File ?? East German citizens climb the Berlin wall in November 1989.
Reuters/ File East German citizens climb the Berlin wall in November 1989.
 ??  ?? The reunificat­ion of Germany and Europe was founded on the belief that a united continent offered all people a better future than the clash of systems.
Heiko Maas
The reunificat­ion of Germany and Europe was founded on the belief that a united continent offered all people a better future than the clash of systems. Heiko Maas

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