Erich Mielke

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Erich Fritz Emil Mielke (December 28, 1907 - May 21, 2000 in Berlin), was a German Communist. He was the head of the intelligence and secret police force in East Germany from 1957 to 1989.

Mielke became a member of the German Communist Party during the 1920s. He took part in street battles against the Nazis, and on August 9 1931 (according to his later trial) he and Erich Ziemer, at the urging of Walter Ulbricht, and planned by Heinz Neumann and Hans Kippenberger, assassinated two Berlin police officers, Paul Anlauf and Franz Lenck. Fleeing arrert for that crime, he escaped to the Soviet Union where he joined numerous other German Communist exiles in Moscow. He was convicted of the murders in absentia by the new Nazi regime in 1934, apparently using evidence extracted under torture. The Nazis also erected a monument to Police Chief Paul Anlauf in 1935.

Due to his record as a reliable Stalinist, Mielke survived Stalin's purges, which decimated the exiled German community. From 1936 to 1939 he was sent to fight in the Spanish Civil War on the Republican side; during World War II he found himself caught in France, interned as an enemy alien by the Vichy regime.

In 1945 Mielke was returned to Germany by the Soviet authorities as a police inspector, with a mandate to build up a security force which would ensure the dominance of the Communist Party in the Soviet occupation zone of Germany, where he was a member of the Socialist Unity Party (SED) Central committee from 1950 until his forced retirement in 1989. From 1950-1953 he was state secretary in the Stasi, later serving as full State Secretary from 1953-1955. From 1955-1957 he was deputy minister of state security.


Tenure as Stasi head

Mielke headed the Stasi from 1957 until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. His network of 85,000 full-time domestic spies and 170,000 voluntary informers kept tabs on millions of people. So many people collaborated with the Stasi that when the records were opened, it was discovered that in every public building, at least one of its members kept the Stasi informed on all the activities within it. At his orders and with his full knowledge, Stasi officers also engaged in arbitrary arrest, kidnapping, brutal harassment of political dissidents, and the inhumane imprisonment of tens of thousands of citizens. He was one of the most powerful – and most hated – men in East Germany, feared even by members of his own Stasi.

In 1989 Mielke was responsible for one of the most famous TV incidents of East Germany: When he addressed the members of parliament as "comrades", as he was used to do, some angry non-SED members asked him to refrain from calling them that. The shattered Mielke first tried to justify his wording and then apologized, declaring: "But I love, I love all people..." (Laughter in the crowd).

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, Mielke was arrested by the new German authorities and charged with the murder of the police officers. Coincidentally, this trial took place in the same courtroom as the Nazi one. Sentenced in October 1993 to six years, he was paroled after less than two, and in 1998 all further legal action against him was ended on the grounds of his poor health.

Mielke died on May 21 2000 aged 92 in a Berlin nursing home. About 100 people reportedly attended the funeral. His remains are buried in the Zentralfriedhof Friedrichsfelde in Berlin. Mielke's unmarked grave is outside the memorial section established at the entrance in 1951 by East German leaders for communist heroes.

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