Hans Modrow

Hans Modrow (born 27 January 1928) is a German left-wing politician, best known as the last communist premier of East Germany. Taking office in the middle of the Peaceful Revolution, he was the de facto leader of the country for much of the winter of 1989 and 1990.

After the end of Communist rule and reunification of Germany, he was convicted of electoral fraud and perjury by the Dresden District Court in 1995. He was the honorary chairman of the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) and has been the president of the "council of elders" of the Left Party since 2007.

Early life and education
Modrow was born in Jasenitz, Province of Pomerania, Germany, now Jasienica  part of the town of Police in Poland. He attended a Volksschule, trained as a machinist from 1942 to 1945 and served briefly in the Volkssturm in 1945. He was subsequently held as a prisoner of war by the Soviet Union, where he joined an anti-fascist school for Wehrmacht members. Upon release in 1949 he worked as a machinist for LEW Hennigsdorf. That same year he joined the Socialist Unity Party (SED).

From 1949 to 1961, Modrow worked in various functions for the Free German Youth (FDJ) in Brandenburg, Mecklenburg and Berlin and in 1952/1953 studied at the Komsomol college in Moscow. From 1953 to 1961, he served as an FDJ functionary in Berlin. From 1954 to 1957, he studied at the SED's Karl Marx school in Berlin, graduating as a social scientist. In 1959–1961 he studied at the University of Economics in Berlin-Karlshorst and obtained the degree of graduate economist. He gained his doctorate at the Humboldt University of Berlin in 1966. West Germany's Federal Intelligence Service (BND) kept Modrow under observation from 1958 to 1990.

Communist party career
Modrow had a long political career in East Germany, serving as a member of the Volkskammer from 1957 to 1990 and in the SED's Central Committee (ZK) from 1967 to 1989, having previously been a candidate for the ZK from 1958 to 1967. From 1961 to 1967 he was first secretary of the district administration of the SED in Berlin-Köpenick and secretary for agitation and propaganda from 1967 to 1971 in the SED's district leadership in Berlin. From 1971 to 1973 he worked as the head of the SED's department of agitation. In 1975 he was awarded the GDR's Patriotic Order of Merit in gold and received the award of the Order of Karl Marx in 1978.

From 1973 onward, he was the SED's first secretary in Dresden, East Germany's third-largest city. He was prevented from rising any further than a local party boss, largely because he was one of the few SED leaders who dared to publicly criticise longtime SED chief Erich Honecker. He developed some important contacts with the Soviet Union, including eventual Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. In early 1987, Gorbachev and the KGB explored the possibility of installing Modrow as Honecker's successor. From 1988 to 1989, the Stasi, under the orders of Honecker and Erich Mielke, conducted a massive surveillance operation against Modrow with the intention of gathering enough evidence to convict him of high treason.

Peaceful Revolution
During the Peaceful Revolution of 1989, Modrow ordered thousands of Volkspolizei, Stasi, Combat Groups of the Working Class and National People's Army troops to crush a demonstration at the Dresden Hauptbahnhof on 4–5 October. Some 1,300 people were arrested. In a top secret and encrypted telex to Honecker on 9 October, Modrow reported: "With the determined commitment of the comrades of the security organs, anti-state terrorist riots were suppressed".

When Honecker was toppled on 18 October, Gorbachev hoped that Modrow would become the new leader of the SED. Egon Krenz, however, was selected instead. He became premier following the resignation of Willi Stoph on 13 November. After Krenz's resignation as leader of the SED on 3 December, Modrow became the de facto leader of East Germany; the premiership was the highest state post in East Germany. The SED, which later changed its name to the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), had abandoned its monopoly of power two days earlier.

To defeat the opposition's demand for the complete dissolution of the Stasi, it was renamed as the "Office for National Security" (Amt für Nationale Sicherheit – AfNS) on 17 November 1989. Modrow's attempt to re-brand it further as the "Office for the Protection of the Constitution of the GDR" (Verfassungsschutz der DDR) failed due to pressure from the public and the opposition parties and the AfNS was dissolved on 13 January 1990. The Modrow government gave orders to destroy incriminating Stasi files.

On 7 December 1989, Modrow accepted the proposal of the East German Round Table opposition groups to hold free elections within six months. He mostly ignored the rest of the Round Table's recommendations and attempted to rule through the Volkskammer. He regarded talks with the democratic socialist Round Table opposition parties as a means of delaying and preferably blocking political change in the GDR. To halt the outflow of citizens and the disintegration of society, Modrow and the Round table agreed on 28 January to bring the scheduled elections forward to 18 March.

Some of the Round Table parties strove for a "third way" model of democratic socialism and therefore agreed with Modrow to slow down or block a reunification with capitalist West Germany. As the SED-PDS regime grew weaker, Modrow on 1 February 1990 proposed a slow, three-stage process that would create a neutral German confederation and continued to oppose "rapid" reunification. The collapse of the East German state and economy in early 1990 and the approaching East German free elections allowed Helmut Kohl's government in Bonn to disregard Modrow's demand for neutrality. From 5 February 1990 on, Modrow included eight representatives of oppositional parties and civil liberties groups as ministers without portfolio in his cabinet. On 13 February 1990, Modrow met with West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, asking for an accommodation loan of 15 billion Deutsche Mark, which was rejected by Kohl.

Modrow remained premier until the 1990 East German general election on 18 March 1990.

Criminal sentence
On 27 May 1993 the Dresden District Court found Modrow guilty of electoral fraud committed in the Dresden municipal elections in May 1989, specifically, understating the percentage of voters who refused to vote for the official slate. (East Germany did not hold free elections until March 1990, and the outcome of any given election was never in doubt.) Modrow did not deny the charges, but argued that the trial was politically motivated and that the court lacked jurisdiction for crimes committed in East Germany. The judge declined to impose a prison sentence or a fine. The Dresden District Court revoked the decision in August 1995, however, and Modrow was sentenced to nine months on probation.

Later life
After German reunification, Modrow served as a member of the Bundestag (1990–1994) and of the European Parliament (1999–2004). Since leaving office, Modrow has authored a number of books on his political experiences, his continued Marxist political views and his disappointment at the dissolution of the Eastern Bloc. He has been criticized for maintaining contacts with Neo-Stalinist groups.