The picnic that changed Europe

Published: 19 August 2009 y., Wednesday

Pasaulio gyventojai
Twenty years ago a picnic was held that went down in history as the event that would play a decisive role in the fall of the Iron Curtain. On 19 August leaders from eastern and western Europe will meet in Sopron in Hungary to take part in celebrations to commemorate this historic day.

Minister for Foreign Affairs Carl Bildt will be present, together with Hungary’s President László Sólyom and Germany’s Federal Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Mr Bildt says that he will give a short speech at the celebrations, and that he will be attending to represent the EU and the new Europe which was a result of the fall of the Iron Curtain.

Mr Bildt travelled in the region a few years prior to 1989, and he says that he remembers the barbed wired and barriers of the Iron Curtain in Sopron.

“Developments in Hungary during those few weeks twenty years ago were vitally important when it came to pulling the rug from beneath the feet of the GDR dictatorship. Events in Sopron showed that there was an opening in the Iron Curtain, a way of getting out, and that set off a whole sequence of events that led to the fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November, and within little more than a year the collapse of the East German state – the linchpin in the Soviet Union’s outer empire,” says Mr Bildt.

The origins of what came to be known as the Pan-European picnic lay in a demonstration that took place in June 1989, when the then Austrian foreign minister Alois Mock and his Hungarian colleague Gyula Horn symbolically cut open the barrier between the two countries.

In August of the same year another demonstration was held, this time organised by the Hungarian opposition, in collaboration with the Pan-European Union. In the same place as the Austrian and Hungarian foreign ministers had cut the border fence, a border crossing was to be held open for three hours - this, too, was a symbolic act.

The demonstration turned into the largest flight from Eastern Europe since the Berlin Wall was erected. More than 600 East Germans took the short-lived opportunity while the Iron Curtain was open to flee across the border to Austria. This resulted in East Germany closing off its borders. The seething discontent spread, and protests against the GDR regime grew, resulting in the fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November.

 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

European cities go green

Following on from Stockholm in 2010 and Hamburg in 2011, Vitoria-Gasteiz (Spain) and Nantes (France) will be rewarded for their efforts to make their urban spaces environmentally-friendly. more »

New momentum in EU-Moldova relations

The European Parliament has welcomed the latest moves by the Republic of Moldova to improve relations with the EU and the country's willingness to seek a solution to the Transnistrian issue. more »

MEPs vote for moderate budget for 2011 but demand negotiations about the future

The European Parliament is calling for more EU investment in research, innovation, education and energy, as well as increased support for Palestine, but is sticking to a restrictive overall spending level for next year's EU budget. more »

Iran: "Human rights are more important than the nuclear issue"

MEPs on the human rights subcommittee debated the situation of human rights in Iran this Thursday with Mohammad Mostafaei, lawyer of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, who has become an international cause célèbre after she was sentenced to being stoned to death. more »

Chile miner rescue rolls on

Slowly but safely, trapped miners in Chile are being excavated from a gold and copper mine after nearly two months underground. more »

Message of condolences by President Barroso to Mr Viktor Yanukovych, President of Ukraine

I should like to express my deep sadness at the tragic loss of life following the train and bus collision which took place in the town of Ordzhonikidze in Ukraine today. more »

Belgrade reeling after gay clashes

At least 150 injured and an estimated 1 m euros damages caused after clashes at anti-gay parade in Belgrade. more »

Commissioner Füle visits Egypt on 11 October 2010

The main purpose of the visit is to discuss with Prime Minister HE Dr Ahmed Nazif and other key ministers how to strengthen the EU-Egypt partnership further. more »

Fighting on Afghan front line

The French army releases dramatic footage it says shows heavy fighting in the Tagab Valley area of Afghanistan. more »

Hungary accident: European team of five experts to start working on the ground on Monday

A European civil protection team of five experts from France, Belgium, Sweden, Austria and Germany will arrive in Hungary on Monday morning to support the Hungarian authorities in their efforts to combat the pollution caused by the break of a sludge depository in the city of Ajka. more »