Front Page |
World |
UK |
UK Politics |
Business |
Sci/Tech |
Health |
Education |
Entertainment |
Talking Point |
High Graphics |
AudioVideo |
Feedback |
Help |
Noticias |
Newyddion |
BBC Sport>>
High Graphics | BBC SPORT>>
Front Page |
World |
UK |
UK Politics |
Business |
Sci/Tech |
Health |
Education |
Entertainment |
Talking Point |
AudioVideo |
World Contents:
Africa |
Americas |
Asia-Pacific |
Europe |
Middle East |
South Asia |
From Our Own Correspondent |
Letter From America |
Friday, 8 December, 2000, 22:37 GMT
Checkpoint Charlie tower demolished
Developers have torn down an old East German watchtower at the former Checkpoint Charlie crossing point in central Berlin - one of the most famous symbols of the Cold War.
The watchtower - demolished on Thursday night - is to make way for offices and shops. City officials said they could not save it, as it was not classified as an historic landmark.
They waited until it was dark, and we were told nothing
in advance. We had often discussed how the tower could be
moved, but now it is too late
Rainer Hildebrandt, Checkpoint Charlie Museum director
Since the Berlin Wall was removed after the city's reunification in 1989, the watchtower had attracted tens of thousands of visitors each year.
A director of the Checkpoint Charlie museum dedicated to the Berlin Wall, Alexandra Hildebrandt, said the decision to bulldoze the watchtower was a "barbaric act".
Memorial
A spokesman for the property developers who own the land said the office complex they planned to build would include a multi-media memorial to the tower.
The concrete watchtower by the Berlin Wall was once used by Soviet and East German soldiers guarding the east-west border.
Since reunification, the main Friedrichstrasse avenue running north from the former border has been lined with glitzy boutiques and car showrooms.
Checkpoint Charlie - which divided the US and Soviet sectors in Berlin - was used as a crossing for foreigners such as Allied diplomats and soldiers.
It came to symbolise the drama of the Cold War, and was the scene of several escape attempts. The Berlin Wall divided the city from 1961 to 1989.
Nearly all of the former 155km (97-mile) Berlin Wall has been torn down, except for a few scattered sections.
About 190 East Germans were killed trying to reach the West before the country's Soviet-backed government - and the Berlin Wall - collapsed in 1989.
About 5,000 made it across, while a similar number were arrested by the East German authorities.
The original checkpoint buildings were dismantled and reassembled at the Allied Museum in the west of the city.
Related to this story:
Germans mark decade of unity
(03 Oct 00 | Europe)
Berlin Wall officials freed
(07 Sep 00 | Europe)
In pictures: Berlin Wall celebrations
(09 Nov 99 | Europe)
Memories from the Wall
(09 Nov 99 | Europe)
Internet links:
German government |
Berlin Wall |
Berlin Wall Online |
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
Front Page |
World |
UK |
UK Politics |
Business |
Sci/Tech |
Health |
Education |
Entertainment |
Talking Point |
High Graphics |
AudioVideo |
Feedback |
Help |
Noticias |
Newyddion |
BBC Sport>>
High Graphics | BBC SPORT>>
Front Page |
World |
UK |
UK Politics |
Business |
Sci/Tech |
Health |
Education |
Entertainment |
Talking Point |
AudioVideo |
World Contents:
Africa |
Americas |
Asia-Pacific |
Europe |
Middle East |
South Asia |
From Our Own Correspondent |
Letter From America |
Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | ©