The Star Malaysia

German parties pick new head

Rights activist Gauck to be next president

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The main political parties have agreed on a common candidate – human rights activist Joachim Gauck.

BERLIN: Germany’s government and the two major opposition parties said they would jointly nominate former East German human rights activist Joachim Gauck to be the country’s next president.

The 72-year-old Gauck is a former Lutheran priest who opposed East Germany’s then communist regime and became head of a federal agency dealing with the painful past of the Communists’ ubiquitous domestic intelligen­ce service after Germany’s reunificat­ion in 1990.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said at a hastily called news conference that her centre-right coalition government and the centre-left opposition rallied behind Gauck, who was initially proposed by the opposition Social Democrats and Greens. He is not a member of any political party.

“What moves me the most, is that a man who was born during the gloomy, dark war, who grew up and lived 50 years in a dictatorsh­ip ... is now called to become the head of state,” Gauck said.

“This is of course a very special day in my life.”

Merkel, who as Gauck grew up in then-communist East Germany or the GDR, said their life stories strongly connected them. “We have both spent a part of our life in the GDR and our dream of freedom has become true in 1989.”

The chancellor stressed that clergymen such as Gauck were at the forefront of the protests that eventually brought down the Communist regime.

Christian Wulff, 52, quit as president on Friday after prosecutor­s asked parliament to strip him of his immunity from prosecutio­n over accusation­s of improper ties to businessme­n.

Gauck urged Germans not to make him out to be a “superman” or a “man without faults”, but pledged to do his utmost to restore a sense of pride to the nation, telling them “that they live in a good country that they can love because it gives them the wonderful possibilit­y to enjoy freedom in a rich life”. — AP

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 ??  ?? Popular choice: Merkel (right) looking at Gauck at the Chanceller­y in Berlin. — Reuters
Popular choice: Merkel (right) looking at Gauck at the Chanceller­y in Berlin. — Reuters

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