The Stasi had 90,000 full-time employees who were assisted by 170,000 full-time unofficial collaborators (Inoffizielle Mitarbeiter); together these made up 1 in 63 (nearly 2%) of the entire East German population. Together with these, a much larger number of occasional informers brought up the total to 1 per 6.5 persons
And in a lot of cases, the “IMs” were close family members and spouses. The alternative to refusing the job was either saying goodbye to any chances of promotion in their jobs in the best case scenario or being jailed themselves in the worst case. Many also accepted because they knew the Stasi would monitor their loved ones anyway, and this way they could at least control the information that was shared.
I was born in the GDR and while I was a small child when the wall came down, I watched a lot of documentaries and also my parents told me a lot of stories. My mother was also approached by the Stasi but she flat out refused. She didn’t suffer any bad consequences (that she knows of), but she was also already military (as a secretary, not a soldier) while my father was a middle ranking officer.
“I have a pen… I have a paper… I know their address… I’ll report them.”
Meanwhile outside of Berlin
In 1981, Rene Seiptius and two friends attempted to flee from East Germany to West Germany. While they managed to avoid land mines, they did trip a spring-gun, killing one of Rene’s friends.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escape_attempts_and_victims_of_the_inner_German_border
thank goodness he brought a spare
Why don’t North Koreans just swim in the water around the DMZ and go to the south? 🤓
Makes me wonder: are north koreans allowed to own an accurate world map?
Yes, but only if you work for the ministry of
propagandatruth.Or you are the nuclear weapons officer, but you only get the map 5 minutes before WW3
Didn’t the wall completely surround the west city?
Theppoor grammar killed the joke for me
EDIT: i am not fixing it
I can’t believe you would eat a good comrade