The day East Germany cut development aid to Mozambique
Johannes Beck
December 17, 2020
Before Germany's reunification in 1989, Mozambique was the primary recipient of East Germany's development aid. An attack in 1984, in Unango, Niassa province, marked a turning point in their bilateral partnership.
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At the time of the attack, the East German government was implementing one of the largest African agricultural projects in Mozambique. East Germany, officially known as Germany Democratic Republique (GDR), had planned projects covering 120,000 hectares at various locations across the country. But the attack halted everything. A total of eight GDR citizens, a Yugoslav development worker, and five Mozambicans died during the attack. To this day, it is unclear who carried out the armed attack.
The GDR had sent Manfred Grunewald, an agricultural expert, to Unango's project. Luckily, he was in the Mozambican capital Maputo at the time of the attack and was about to fly home at the airport when he heard the news.
DW: What exactly happened that morning in December when GDR experts accompanied by the Mozambican army drove from Lichinga, their place of residence, towards Unango, the project site's location?
Manfred Grunewald: One can say so much. But in the first three months, we were guarded during our trips to the agricultural production site because, unlike in the past, the RENAMO [National Resistance of Mozambique] rebel movement suddenly showed up in the north. RENAMO did not attack any strategically important military targets; instead, they brutally attacked the populationand often forced entire villages to evacuate.
Was it only the GDR experts who died?
No, the attackers killed seven Germans on the spot; two others were seriously injured. A Yugoslav employee and five Mozambicans, including two guards, also died. It's not that the guards disappeared and didn't shoot at all. They were also killed because they resisted.
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Did the two who were injured survive?
The seriously injured one was brought to Maputo in a small plane and was operated on there. He died of his injuries ten days later. One suspects a dum-dum bullet [a deformation bullet; that expands and tears down body organs and tissue upon entry into body tissue]. That means that the attackers used projectiles. They had long been banned in warfare even then. The other injured person was shot through the leg. He traveled home with us and survived.
That interesting because the other dead are rarely even mentioned in the reports here in Germany. What happened in the following days?
We fear that there were more deaths, but we have not found out who else is included in the reports. This sudden terrorist attack, which resulted in so many people's deaths, also meant that this project had to be stopped overnight in all of Mozambique, and the GDR withdrew its entire staff. However, there were snipers at work who did not even allow the machines and various other work bases to be removed. And the Mozambicans have not been able to do any further work.
Was there a moment after your return where you and the bereaved relatives offered help to cope with the trauma?
As far as I know, the dead men's wives got sick leaves. The funeral expenses were paid for, and so were the funeral advertisements in the local newspapers. There was also an orphan's pension for the children and the widow's pension. Insofar as this was given in the GDR legal framework, but there was no special support either before or after the fall of the Wall. There were no offers to deal with trauma.
On the contrary, it wasn't even investigated. So, at no time has the state, neither the GDR nor the Federal Republic, at the state level, a public prosecutor, etc.… done anything to investigate this terrorist attack. What disappointed me most was that society took in little or nothing of what happened there.
Do you still wish that the attack at Unango should be solved?
First of all, I would like the German side to not only proceed in a formal legal manner but also to think about how one can use public relations to appreciate the achievements of the experts at the time. Second, there is still something that can be done to clear up this dilemma. Who was behind it, that our group was attacked in such a way and paid for their efforts for a good cause with their lives? Incidentally, there is no one among our group who hates or dislikes the people of Mozambique.
Africa and communist East Germany
Communist East Germany sought ties with African states which leaned ideologically towards the Soviet Union such as Angola, Ethiopia, Mozambique and Tanzania. This era ended with German reunification 25 years ago.
Image: Ismael Miquidade
Vocational training far from the civil war battleground
Skilled workers from African socialist and Marxist-Leninist states received vocational training in communist East Germany until it was reunified with West Germany. In 1983 while a civil war was raging at home, these Angolans were taking part in a six month course at the Central Institute for Industrial Safety in Dresden. East Germany backed the Marxist-Leninist MPLA regime.
Image: Bundesarchiv/183-1983-0516-022 /U. Häßler
Solidarity with African liberation movements
A plane from the East German airline Interflug at Luanda airport. It is carrying supplies for Angolan schools. In 1978, other beneficiaries of East Germany's Solidarity Committee, which coordinated development aid, included the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO), the African National Congress (ANC), Ethiopia and Mozambique.
Image: Bundesarchiv/183-T0517-0022/R. Mittelstädt
Courses for African journalists
East Germany trained hundreds of African journalists from almost every corner of the continent. They attended the 'School of Solidarity' run by the Federation of East German Journalists in Friedrichshagen, East Berlin. This course for young journalists from Angola, Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde and Sao Tome and Principe took place in December 1976.
Image: Bundesarchiv/183-R1210-302
'School of Friendship'
Margot Honecker, education minister and wife of East German leader Erich Honecker, greets Samora Machel, Mozambique's first president at the School of Friendship in Straßfurt in 1983. Mozambique and East Germany had agreed in 1979 that 899 Mozambican children would attend the East German school over a four year period.
Image: Bundesarchiv/Bild 183-1983-0303-423/H. Link
Dr Agostinho Neto High School
While President Jose Eduardo dos Santos of Angola was visiting East Germany, High School No. 26 in Pankow, East Berlin was renamed in honor of his predecessor, Dr Agostinho Neto. Members of the communist East German youth league, FDJ, welcomed the Angolan president waving banners which read "On the side of the Soviet Union, for peace and socialism!"
Angolan President dos Santos (5th from left) also visited the Berlin Wall in front of the Brandenburg Gate in East Berlin. East Germany sealed off the western sectors of Berlin in August 1961 to prevent disgruntled East Germans from fleeing to the West. East Berlin called the Wall as the "anti-fascist barrier." Some 200 people were killed by communist border guards while trying to cross it.
Image: Bundesarchiv
African guests at East German Communist Party congresses
The ruling East German Communist Party (SED) was always pleased to welcome foreign guests of the right ideological temperament to their congresses. Guests in 1981 included Ambrosi Lukoki (back row far right), member of the MPLA from Angola, as well as Berhanu Bayeh (back row 2nd from left), later to become foreign minister in Ethiopia's Marxist-Leninist Derg dictatorship.
Image: Bundesarchiv/183-Z0041-138/M. Siebahn
East German Communist Party (SED) functionaries in Africa
High-ranking African Marxist-Leninists visited East Germany and their East German counterparts returned the compliment by travelling to Africa. East German politburo member Konrad Naumann (2nd row, right) attended the third party congress of the African Party for the Independence of Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde (PAIGC) in Bissau in November 1977.
Communist indoctrination of schoolchildren in East Germany spilled over into the holidays when they attended camps for the Young Pioneers and Thälmann Pioneers youth organizations. The visitor from the People's Republic of Congo is being introduced to Die Trommel, the Thälmann Pioneers' magazine at the Pionerrrepublik Wilhelm Pieck camp near East Berlin.
Image: Bundesarchiv/183-T0803-0302
A weekend with an East German family
Young African visitors, attending a summer camp in 1982, spent a weekend with East German families. A special train took them to Schwedt, an industrial town closer to the border with Poland. Sandra Maria Bernardo from Angola is welcomed by her host Ingeborg Scholz and daughter Petra.
Image: Bundesarchiv/183-1982-0731-010 /K. Franke
Tractors for 'fraternal socialist states'
In 1979 tractors made by the East German tractor plant in Schönebeck were donated to Ethiopia, then a Marxist-Leninist state. The ZT 300-C tractor was exported to a total of 26 countries, including Angola and Mozambique.
Image: Bundesarchiv/183-U1110-0001/Schulz
East German textile machinery in Ethiopia
This textile factory in Kombolcha in the Ethiopian province of Amhara (picture: November 2005) produces sheets and towels. It was built in 1984 with the support of East Germany and Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic and Slovakia). Almost all of the machinery was made by the East German collective combine TEXTIMA in the city of Karl-Marx-Stadt (now Chemnitz).
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
East German prefab in Zanzibar
The state of Tanzania was founded by Julius Nyerere in 1964. East Germany supported his experiment in socialism by erecting a long row of prefabricated concrete buildings in Zanzibar. The prefab blocks were freighted to Zanzibar by sea and were assembled on arrival. The 'Michenzani,' as it is called, is still standing.
Image: cc-by-sa/Sigrun Lingel
Wages unpaid 25 years after East Germany's demise
Some 15,000 Mozambicans worked as contract labor in East Germany in the late 1980s. Most returned home after East Germany's reunification with West Germany on October 3, 1990. Back home the Mozambicans were called 'Madgermanes' - a derivation of 'Made in Germany.' The Mozambican state never paid them the wages for work they did in East Germany. They protest regularly in Maputo to this day.
Image: Ismael Miquidade
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On the contrary, we know some elements wanted to disrupt development. And if there is always only war and terror, then humanity cannot develop normally. That would have been a possibility. In Niassa, whether under socialism or capitalism, one could have produced enough food products, also for the market. We had already set up two shops selling vegetables and charcoal. Something had really got going there, and it shouldn't have been destroyed. That's what I blame the Mozambican elements that destroyed this.
Ten years ago, there was a film on the [German public broadcaster] MDR, and we were involved. A RENAMO representative from Lichinga denied any responsibility and said, "a lot happens in the context of a war. But we did not carry out this attack." Mozambique cannot withdraw into that position and say that we have given amnesty. We're not investigating anything anymore. We have the right to have our rights therein Mozambique examined further. Even if these people are long dead, their children are now grownups. The dead now have grandchildren. They want to know what happened back then.
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The interview was conducted by Johannes Beck
Manfred Grunewald was an agricultural expert from the former German Democratic Republic (GDR).