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Demonstration against the single ticket voting system, Leipzig, May 7 1989: Building facade in Leipzig [18/19]

OBJECT INFORMATION

Info

May 7 1989
Leipzig, Markt
Created By: Roland Quester, Quelle: BStU

License: Creative Commons License

Building facade in Leipzig, taken on the day of the communal elections in 1989, at which candidates of the National Front (an alliance of political parties and mass organisations in East Germany controlled by the Socialist Unity Party of Germany) received 98.85 of the votes at an official voter-turnout of 98.78, thereby achieving the worst electoral results in the history of the GDR. For the first time, citizens throughout East Germany were determined to prove the authorities guilty of electoral fraud. After polling booths closed, groups of voters participated in a public count and in almost every case it could be proven that the authorities were indeed guilty of electoral fraud. On the evening of the election, the first scattered demonstrations already began appearing in various cities. 72 protesters were arrested in Leipzig. (cf. Lindner, Bernd: Die demokratische Revolution in der DDR 1989/90. Bonn 1998, S. 25ff)

Depicts

banner (flag), houses

Context

arrest, camera, fair, local election, protest, surveillance

People/Organizations

Ministry for State Security, People's Police

Places

Leipzig

Other items in this set

Memory

"The photos were taken in inner-city Leipzig on the day of the last local elections in East Germany 1989. There had been an appeal for people to make a clear show of their protest against the single ticket voting system by taking their ballot cards to Leipziger Markt. Those who did were meant to thereby use them as proof that they had not voted. Naturally the government body got hold of the flyers announcing the appeal and promptly organized for a fair to be held on Leipziger Markt the same day. They sent a tremendous amount of plain-clothed Stasi to the inner-city (many equipped with video and photographic gear) and riot police were ready and waiting in the side streets. I tried to document all of that. Then at some point, while taking pictures of a Stasi arrest, they realized that my camera and I did not belong to them but to the others and they arrested me. My films were confiscated and are currently located at the BStU [Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Archives]."

Roland Quester