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Regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

Hungary's Iron Curtain fell but fence rose

30 years on, where it all began

Reuters Published 18.08.19, 09:19 PM
People walk freely after the fall of the Berlin Wall, 1989.

People walk freely after the fall of the Berlin Wall, 1989. (Wikimedia Commons)

Thirty years ago on Monday, Hungarian border guards for the first time allowed people from communist East Germany to cross freely into Austria and hundreds of them rejoiced. The Iron Curtain was passing into history.

This was a milestone in a year of momentous change in Europe, leading in a few short months to the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989.

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But Hungary, the first country to dismantle the east-west frontier, was also the first to fortify its southern border against a big new influx of Asian and African immigrants.

In 2015, Hungary built a high-tech double razor wire fence, complete with heat sensors, night vision cameras and constant border patrols along its 300km border with Serbia and Croatia.

This was the physical manifestation of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s vision of a “fortress Europe”.

The immigration issue threw a wrench into the usually close ties between Hungary and Germany, since Orban clashed with the views of Chancellor Angela Merkel, who initially opened the gates to migrants.

Orban and Merkel will mark the fall of the Iron Curtain together in Sopron on Monday.

In Europe, opinion is divided on these new barriers. For some of those whose lives were changed forever by their chance to flee to the West, they are a calamity. They remember fondly the so-called Pan-European Picnic, where hundreds of East Germans broke through to Austria as border guards stood aside.

“That was our second birthday,” said Hermann Pfitzenreiter, who took his wife and small children across the border that day and has come back to the border town of Sopron to mark the anniversary and meet old Hungarian friends.

“Erecting these walls and fences, it’s catastrophic,” added his wife Margarete. “As Germans we belonged in Germany, but we had experienced the same unliveable life (as today’s immigrants). I’d love to drop Viktor Orban on the other side so he feels what that is like.”

“High as these walls may be, they will never deter people,” Hermann said. “What you see in the pictures (of us crossing) can’t be put into words. We could not believe it was happening, it was total ecstasy….” The Pfitzenreiters now live in Germany.

Hungarians who helped bring down the Iron Curtain resent any parallels with Hungary’s current southern border fortifications or its practice of keeping immigration next to zero, saying such practice is necessary to preserve the Europe that the events of 1989 created.

Arpad Bella, who headed the border station unit posted at the Sopron crossing in August 1989, said he had his hands full with the Pan-European Picnic, a political jamboree packed with hundreds of “Ossies”, or east Germans.

“I could confront them and risk violence, or let them through and face the consequences,” he said. He chose the latter. “Every border guard was sick of the task.… We just wanted them gone.”

Bella added: “We did that for the sake of European unity. And what we do now serves to preserve that unity. If some countries dislike that or it hurts some interests, let them worry about it. I fully support Viktor Orban in this policy.”

He evaded any consequences as his chief waited on the national chief, who waited on the interior minister, who waited on then Prime Minister Miklos Nemeth, who waited on Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.

Laszlo Magas, who organised the Pan-European picnic in 1989, said it was “shocking and wonderful to see those people with their kids on their shoulders, approaching the border all scared, then erupt in happiness when they stepped over to Austria.”

Magas said that had nothing to do with today’s situation. “It was anachronistic to have two Germanys. We were helping a nation…. Let’s not mix that up with the fence that the masses of migrants forced us to build.”

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