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Episode 2
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On the Berlin Wall's 50th anniversary, Gerry Northam looks at its political context and its human consequences.
On Sunday 13 August 1961, Berliners awoke to find telephone wires cut and a wall being erected across the city.
The wall, which ultimately extended for over 100 miles, separated them from family, friends and jobs for 28 years.
In so doing, it became a potent symbol of the Cold War.
On the 50th anniversary of the Berlin Wall going up Gerry Northam examines the Wall’s political context and re-visits the day which signified the peak of the Cold War, the constant threat of nuclear war, and the human price paid for yet more failed ideologies.
Last on
Sun 28 Aug 201113:05GMT
BBC World Service Online
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- Tue 23 Aug 201108:05GMTBBC World Service Online
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