The Denver Post

Hans Modrow was the last leader of Communist East Germany

- By Geir Moulson

Hans Modrow, who served as East Germany’s last Communist leader during a turbulent tenure that ended in the country’s first and only free election, has died. He was 95.

M o d - row died early Saturday, the Lef t party parliament­ary group tweeted.

Modrow, a reformm i n d e d Communist, took over East Germany shortly after the Berlin Wall fell and later invited opposition forces into the government, but he could not slow the gathering momentum for German reunificat­ion.

“The entire peaceful course of establishi­ng German unity was precisely a special achievemen­t of his,” the Left wrote on Twitter. “That will remain his political legacy.”

During 16 years as Communist Party chief in Dresden, starting in 1973, Modrow built a reputation as an anti- establishm­ent figure. He rejected party perks and insisted on living in a normal apartment.

A post in East Germany’s top leadership eluded him until he was made prime minister, a position that previously carried little clout, in November 1989 — days after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

When hard- line leader Egon Krenz and his ruling Politburo resigned in early December, Modrow emerged as East Germany’s top political figure. But the Communists could no longer call the shots on their own. The following month, he agreed to share power with the increasing­ly vocal opposition and moved up East Germany’s landmark first free election to March 1990, amid growing unrest.

Even as pro- democracy rallies rapidly took on a prounifica­tion flavor, the Communists initially had opposed talk of reunificat­ion. In February 1990, however, Modrow urged talks with West Germany toward an eventual “united fatherland” that would be independen­t of military blocs and governed by a joint parliament in Berlin.

Modrow headed the election campaign of the restyled Communists, the Party of Democratic Socialism, but his personal popularity was not enough to prevent them finishing as only the thirdstron­gest party, with 16 percent support.

The winner was an alliance of conservati­ve parties that favored quick reunificat­ion and was backed by the government of West German leader Helmut Kohl. Germany reunited under Kohl’s leadership and as a NATO member on Oct. 3, 1990, less than a year after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Modrow became a member of the united parliament, where he sat until 1994, and honorary chairman of the post- Communist PDS — the predecesso­r of today’s opposition Left party. From 1999 to 2004, he was a member of the European Parliament.

Modrow’s past under hard- line Communist rule landed him in court several years after reunificat­ion.

In 1995, a court convicted him of inciting the falsificat­ion of results in May 1989 local elections in Dresden. It handed him a nine- month suspended sentence and a fine.

Modrow claimed that the trial was politicall­y motivated and asserted that its outcome would aggravate divisions between east and west Germans.

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Hans Modrow

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