"Figures do vary, but between 1964 and 1989 there were approximately 33,700 political prisoners that were sold," Haines says. "In addition to that, they obviously had lots of family members. So there was an additional 250,000 people who were sold."NPR has an interview with Haines in which he describes the secret practice of buying political prisoners from East Germany.
It's a huge number. German media wrote about the practice, but few people in the English-speaking world knew about it until Haines' article came out. He says both sides, East and West, weren't interested in having the story come out. Why? It makes both countries look terrible.
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Monday, November 10, 2014
Buying People from East Germany
During
the Cold War, East Germany had very little money, because the Soviet
Union had stripped the country of its assets. What they had plenty of
were political prisoners, so there was a clandestine program to sell
these prisoners -and their family members- to West Germany. Journalist
Gavin Haines wrote about the practice for the BBC.
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