REDS
ALLOWED TO ROAM FREELY WHILE NS DISSIDENTS HUNTED AND IMPRISONED
Former Communist secret police infest
German society
Germany
shocked by the other lives of civil servants
Twenty years after Berlin Wall fell, more than 17,000
former Stasi members are still working for the state
Berliners
and the citizens of eastern Germany are struggling to digest the news
that thousands of former members of the dreaded Stasi secret police
were working as their local civil servants, police officers and
teachers, almost 20 years after the Iron Curtain collapsed.
More than 17,000 staff currently employed
by Berlin and eastern Germany's five federal states were estimated to
have worked for the all-pervasive Communist police organization,
according to evidence compiled by historians at Berlin's Free
University.
Shocking cases came to light after the fall
of the Berlin Wall, including a husband who spied on his dissident wife
for years and a mother who informed the Stasi about her son after he
reached puberty because she considered him a threat to the state.
The lengths to which the so-called "Sword
and Shield" of the Communist Party went to obtain information was
graphically portrayed in the award-winning 2006 German film, The
Lives of Others. It tells the story of a ferret-like Stasi major
called Gerd Wiessler who is sent to spy on a dissident East Berlin
author and his lover by recording their phone calls.
In the film, Wiessler is depicted as a near
down-and-out after the fall of the Berlin Wall, forced to paste up
street advertisements to earn a living. Yet the researchers say reality
was different for thousands of ex-Stasi workers after reunification.
Many were able to get around laws adopted by reunified Germany in 1991,
and hang on to their jobs because vetting was interpreted differently
from state to state.
Employment kept secret
Klaus Schröder, the head of the
research team, said their findings exposed the extent to which regional
administrations appeared to have kept their
employment of former Stasi agents a secret. "This has achieved a
dimension no one expected," he said.
Groups representing the victims of the
Stasi's blanket surveillance of the former East Germany's 17 million
inhabitants said they were appalled by the disclosures. Ronald
Lässig, of the Victims of Stalinism Association, described them as
a "slap in the face for every Stasi victim" and demanded that efforts
to properly vet civil servants be redoubled.
The
Stasi was one of the biggest employers in the former East Germany. It
had some 200,000 people working for the organization full- and
part-time and it is estimated that one in every 50 East Germans had
Stasi connections.
About half of the Stasi's employees were civilians who worked as
informants. But the information they gleaned from spying on neighbors,
friends and colleagues was used to imprison people, strip them of
privileges and ruin careers.
Police force infiltrated
Evidence found by both the Berlin
researchers and the authors of a new book on the Stasi, They are
Still Among Us, showed that authorities in the eastern state of
Saxony allowed half of the former Stasi informers to keep their jobs.
Saxony's police force was said to have been
infiltrated by "companies" of former Stasi informants. The state's
conservative administration merely ruled that those officers should be
given backroom jobs and kept from direct contact with the public. The
state is still thought to employ the largest number of former Stasi
agents. Last Wednesday, Germany's Federal Criminal Police admitted that
23 former Stasi employees, who were given jobs after reunification,
were still working there.
The Stasi disclosures have prompted a
political row. Wolfgang Bosbach, the deputy parliamentary leader of
Angela Merkel's conservatives, demanded that all civil servants in the
east should be re-vetted.
But
Stephan Hilsberg, a Social Democrat MP, said the mere fact that former
Stasi employees were now working as civil servants was not the real
issue. "The problem is where they end up," he said, "It is perfectly
all right for them to work as janitors but if they end up in positions
of authority, it becomes a problem."
Stasi: East
Germany's feared secret police
Stasi was the abbreviation used by East
Germany's Ministry for State Security, with its motto "Shield and Sword
of the Party", the huge and highly efficient secret police force which
had the task of identifying and rooting out "class enemies."
The
tens of thousands of full-time agents were augmented by hundreds of
thousands of part-time spies, making the German Democratic Republic one
of the most closely monitored societies of modern times. Every block of
flats had its part-time, live-in spook, and residents and the guests of
hotels were filmed through tiny holes drilled in the walls.
After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Communist
regime, the Ministry was dissolved. A long-running controversy over the
fate of the Stasi's files was resolved with a decision to allow public
access to them.