Margot Honecker, the widow of former East German leader Erich Honecker, has died in Chile at the age of 89. She had lived in Santiago for the last 20 years.
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Margot Honecker died on Friday in Chile, according to people close to the family.
Local television reported that she had been suffering from cancer.
Honecker had been living in the Chilean capital as a recluse.
She was married to Erich Honecker who led East Germany from 1971 until 1989. She was an influentual member of the East German communist party and the East German regime until 1989.
Honecker served as education minister during her husband's term and introduced mandatory military training into schools.
She was known locally as the "Purple Witch" because of her tinted hair and hard-line stance. Former Bundestag president Wolfgang Thierse described her as "the most hated person" in East Germany next to Stasi chief Erich Mielke.
After 1989
The couple left Germany for Russia in 1989. Fearing extradition to Germany, they took refuge in the Chilean embassy in Moscow in 1991. Erich Honecker was extradited from Russia to Germany by Boris Yeltsin's government but he was released on grounds of ill health in 1993. They moved to Chile in 1993.
In 1999, Honecker lost a lawsuit to regain private property that had been confiscated by Germany's government.
One of Honecker's last public statements was a comment on people who had tried to cross over the Berlin Wall, calling them "stupid."
"There was no need for that, it was not necessary to climb the wall," she said in an interview with ARD television. She defended the East German state, attacked those who brought it down and complained about her pension. "The GDR also had its foes. That's why we had the Stasi," she told the Guardian newspaper in April 2012.
Honecker is survived by her daughter, Sonja, who lives in Chile. Erich Honecker died of cancer in Chile in 1994.
Berlin's former Stasi slammer
Berlin-Hohenschönhausen is where the former East German secret state police, the "Stasi," had their central remand center. Today it is a memorial site to those who suffered persecution under the Communist dictatorship.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
Old building with a dark history
In 1945 the Soviet occupying forces turned the former commercial kitchen compound into an internment camp. The cellar was converted by the prisoners into a remand center. Victims reported that they were tormented by sleep deprivation, beatings, kickings, being forced to stand for hours or subjected to water torture. Food, clothing, and hygiene standards were terrible. Some 1,000 people died.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
Prison known as 'U-Boot'
In 1951 the newly-formed East German secret state police, the Stasi, took over the prison. During the 50s most inmates were those opposed to the communist dictatorship, such as reformers and strike leaders involved in the 17 June 1953 uprising. As there was never any daylight in the damp cells, the inmates nick-named the prison 'U-Boot," German for submarine.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
New building
At the end of the 50s a new building with more than 200 cells and interrogation rooms replaced the old cellar jail. Physical violence was replaced by psychological torture. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961 most inmates were those who had attempted to escape or leave East Germany, but also writers and civil rights activists.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
Disguised prisoner transports
In the 70s most prisoners were brought through the city to the jail in Hohenschönhausen in these Barkas B 1000 vehicles. Made to appear outwardly as fish or vegetable delivery vans, these vehicles had five tiny windowless cells, which meant inmates had no idea where they had been taken. The Stasi succeeded in pressuring 90 percent of inmates to make damning statements in their first interrogation.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
Loneliness of a cell block
In prison every inmate was addressed not by name but by their cell number. To socially ostracize them they were often put into isolation cells for months, where even talking to the guards was forbidden. The only human contact was therefore with the interrogator - an insidious way to make inmates talk.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
Prison cell
Up to three inmates were housed in the different sized cells. They were unable to see anything through the cell windows, which were made of glass blocks. A mirror and hot water was only made available as of 1983. During the day inmates were not allowed to lie on their cots, at night they had to assume the same position: lying on their backs, facing the door with their hands on top of the blanket.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
Spy in the door
Inmates found being permanently watched in their cells through the spy hole in the door very stressful. Guards would keep a check on the prisoners even when they were washing or using the toilet. At night the lights would be switched on every ten to twelve minutes. Heating and light could only be controlled from outside the cells. This all served to make the inmates feel utterly powerless.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
Alarm system
A wire was mounted along the walls of the cell block corridor. When a prisoner was taken from his cell to be interrogated, the guards pulled the wire, which made red warning lights light up. Any inmate in the corridor would then have to face the wall immediately. This was intended to prevent prisoners encountering one another.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
Interrogation block
The cell block and the interrogation rooms where separated by barred doors. To this day the linoleum floor still smells of the disinfectant used in East Germany. All 120 interrogation rooms were equipped with double padded doors, behind which inmates where subjected to hours of questioning over several months. Prisoners were expected to incriminate themselves so that they could be sentenced.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
Interrogation
Stasi police used elaborate psychological interrogation methods. Initially they would threaten the inmate with long prison terms or the arrest of their family members. Panic and uncertainty were intended to wear them down. Those who cooperated were promised an easing of detention conditions: medical attention, a book, or half an hour of yard exercise.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
Prison yard
In these cell-like compounds inmates could see the sky and breathe some fresh air. They themselves called the yards "tiger cages." It was forbidden to talk, sing, stop, or to go anywhere near the four-meter (4.1-yard) prison wall. An armed guard was always on patrol above the wire mesh.
Image: DW/E. Jahn
Memorial site
The fall of the Berlin Wall put an end to the Stasi remand center. But only few interrogators were ever made accountable for what had happened behind these walls, and none were sent to jail. As the prison buildings and the interior survived unharmed, today's memorial site of Hohenschönhausen gives an authentic insight into the former East German justice system.