Richard Baier (born 27 November 1926) is a German former journalist and radio presenter.
He was now sent to work for the legendary sports reporter, Rolf Wernicke, who sent him to spend the next four weeks with the archives, mastering the basic elements of sport. Baier's first live broadcasting involved covering the sports news. From April 1944 he was also assigned the mid afternoon (15.00) army reports. His six months as an intern ended at the end of the month and, still aged only seventeen and a half, he received an employment contract. For June 1944 his name was added the news-readers' rota, delivering the morning (07.00) news for the first time on 1 June 1944, freshly minted, direct from the Propaganda Ministry. Less than two months later on 20 July 1944, it was Baier who read on the early evening news (18.32) the first radio report of the assassination attempt against Adolf Hitler.
As the bombing worsened, from the start of 1944 radio transmissions came from a bunker, protected by several meters of concrete, adjacent to the Großdeutscher Rundfunk building. During the final months of the war just three people were left working in the radio bunker. Siegried Niemann was responsible for "entertainment" while Elmer Bantz and Richard Baier were responsible for "Politics". The Propaganda Ministry continued to provide the scripts, while the "eastern front" moved ever closer. On 30 April 1945 it was Baier who delivered the "Propaganda Report" for the army. There was no mention of Hitler's suicide two and a half hours earlier. That was reported only the next day. Following management instructions, on the day after that, 2 May 1945, Großdeutscher Rundfunk transmissions were officially concluded with a short statement, read out by Richard Baier.
It was as an interpreter that he took part on negotiations over the Wanfried agreement which led to a small (but locally significant) change in the frontier between the US and Soviet military occupation zones. After the US forces were withdrawn from Bad Sooden, Baier and his mother relocated the short distance to Eschwege. From here he provided news reports to the regional newspaper, the "Kasseler Zeitung". In 1947 he made his way to the local university, at Marburg, hoping to enroll as a medical student. Study places were in short supply, however, and the university was only accepting for matriculation those medical students who had already completed some terms of study before the outbreak of war back in 1939. Instead he embarked on a degree course as an "external student" in Contemporary History, Marburg having taken over the Institute for Contemporary History formerly at Königsberg, following the destruction of the former capital. He emerged with a degree in April 1950. While working for his degree Baier also contributed reports for the "Hessische Neueste Nachrichten" (newspaper). Later he became editor in chief of the newly launched national sports magazine "Der Illustrierte Boxring". After just six months he managed to increase the circulation to more than 50,000 copies.
Although the political division of Berlin had been evident from a map back in 1945, at that time the divisions had been easy to ignore. After the currency reforms, the Berlin Blockade, and other events of 1948, the political division was increasingly mirrored by economic and social division, and during the 1950s those divisions were increasingly reflected by physical divisions in the form of check points. Nevertheless, even in 1955 it was perfectly possible for German residents to live in East Berlin (where rents and goods, if available, were far cheaper) and work in West Berlin (where rents and wages were higher). There were still plenty of people, including Richard Baier, who found it convenient and indeed interesting to do just that. During the early 1950s he became one of the best known presenters working on the RIAS.
In June 1953 Baier was able to report on the East German uprising. The events were little reported at the time in the west and only very selectively in East German media. But East Germans nevertheless enjoyed a fuller awareness of the uprising than most, partly on accounts of the RIAS news reports. RIAS reporter Richard Baier knew what was happening because he was there. He saw the angry people and the Red Army tanks in the streets between the Karl-Marx-Allee and the )/" itemprop="url" title="Wiki: Leipziger Platz">Leipziger Platz. He saw the burning street kiosks and the smashing of windows, along with the demonstrators using stone and pieces of wood to hit the tanks. The "Columbus House" was being targeted by demonstrators. "Here they thought there was a police listening post, but they only found a storage depot for a trading operation", Baier was able to report to his listeners. Also he shared his judgements of the situation: "If the Russians had wanted it, they could have served up a blood bath". In the days directly before the uprising he had been aware growing discontent. As he reported, the supply situation had worsened dramatically in the days and weeks before 17 June. Supply bottlenecks were making it impossible for scheduled production volumes to be produced. Where factories could not produce according to their quotas it was the workers in those factories who faced wage cuts. Official notice given out on 28 May 1953 of an imminent across-the-board price increase further stoked the discontent. Soon there was a banner fluttering from a building site across Walter Ulbricht's showpiece Karl-Marx-Allee calling for a cut in the infamous production quotas. ( "Runter mit den Normen"). Richard Baier had a sense of the seething anger. "There's something going on in the east" ( "Im Osten tut sich was") he told RIAS colleagues on 15 June 1953. The next day several hundred construction workers demonstrated in front of East German ministry buildings, to be joined by fellow East Berliners. "From this point it's not just about cutting production quotas. The workers are demanding better living and working conditions, an increase in the food ration on the ration cards, better flour and potatoes" ( "Es geht zu diesem Zeitpunkt schon nicht mehr nur um die Rücknahme der Normen, die Arbeiter fordern die Verbesserung der Arbeits-Lebensbedingungen, Erhöhung der Lebensmittelrationen auf den Lebensmittelkarten, besseres Mehl und Kartoffeln.") Baier was able to report. The next day, first by telephone and then turning up at the RIAS studios in person, a delegation of East German construction workers demanded that Egon Bahr, the station's editor in chief, allow them to use the station to broadcast a call for a general strike in East Germany. But Gordon Ewing, the US director of the radio channel, firmly rejected that idea. "A direct confrontation with the Soviet Union at that time was not part of the US agenda". Somehow the time of a demonstration to take place on 17 June in the Strausberger Platz nevertheless received several mentions over the air waves.
The first Soviet tanks rolled onto the streets of East Berlin in the early morning of 17 June. By around 7 o'clock the RIAS reporter was back on duty in the city centre. Trains filled with demonstrators were arriving. The morning was cold and it was raining. "The demonstrators now have political demands. They want the government to resign and they want free elections using a secret ballot" ( "Die Demonstranten erheben jetzt politische Forderungen, sie wollen den Rücktritt der Regierung und freie und geheime Wahlen.") A massive military reaction got underway around midday. Baier saw Soviet tanks and troop trucks approaching from the Alexanderplatz. They moved slowly, stopping and then moving on again, relentlessly pushing the crowds before them. The tank guns were half raised and the soldiers also pointed their Kalashnikovs over the crowd, periodically firing warning shots. Baier heard the whistling of the bullets. By the end of the evening East Berlin was virtually sealed off. A curfew was in place from the early evening (18.00) till five the next morning. During the night Richard Baier slipped back across to the RIAS studio in West Berlin. "There was no thought of sleep. we were much too psyched up by events".
It turned out that Richard Baier was one of 49 people "rounded up" by the Stasi during the early summer of 1955. They were identified collectively as "RIAS agents". Since 1953 the ministry had intensified activities against the broadcaster, both by trying to jam the signal and by introducing undercover spies into its offices in West Berlin. There is speculation that one of these spies had managed to steal the address book of a RIAS employee, which was then used to identify and target the 49 people arrested. Five of the forty nine were arbitrarily picked out for participation in a "show trial spectacular" before the Supreme Court. The five included Richard Baier and a 29 year old painter-decorator called Joachim Wiebach. The nation's leader, Walter Ulbricht took a close personal interest in the show trial. Instructions to the court included a hand-written correction by Ulbricht in which he wrote "Proposal: Death sentence" ( "Vorschlag: Todesurteil") by the name of Wolfgang Wiebach. Wiebach was guillotined at the National Execution Facility in Dresden on 13 September 1955. Richard Baier, still aged only 29, was given a 13-year jail term for "espionage". After six years and nine months in prison, on 21 August 1961, and eight days after the erection of the Berlin Wall finally sealed off West Berlin from the eastern part of the city, Baier was released from jail as part of an amnesty. He was ordered to live in Potsdam: a Stasi officer drove him from the jail to the town hall and then came in with him in order to provide assistance with registration of his new domicile. Conditions for his release included a ban on professional work. Also, he was not to return to Berlin.
He was rearrested on 17 June 1982. The charge was "Public criticism of the German Democratic Republic and its Soviet partner-state" ( "öffentlicher Herabwürdigung der DDR und der befreundeten Sowjetunion"). He was sentenced to another year in prison. His error had been to criticise the destruction of the Garrison Church in Potsdam as a crime against culture. After serving ten months of the twelve-month sentence he was released on probation, subjected to a more restrictive ban on working than before. He was, however, able to get work as a restaurant manager in the "Hans Marchwitza" House, an arts-focused establishment on the edge of the Old City Hall development in Potsdam.
Die Wende marked the end of the East German dictatorship, followed in October by reunification, which signalled the end of East Germany as a politically separate German state. After an absence of nearly half a century, Richard Baier moved back to Kassel.
US occupation zone
RIAS
Nemesis deferred
Released
Looking back
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