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Germany was reunited on October 3, 1990, after four decades of Cold War division.
East Germany joined the western federal republic less than a year after the east’s communist rulers — under pressure from growing protests — opened the Berlin Wall and the rest of the highly fortified border between the two countries.
While much progress has been made since then, economic and other differences between the west and the less-prosperous east still persist.
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“We have achieved a lot in these 30 years,” Chancellor Angela Merkel, who grew up in the east, told Germany’s parliament this week.
“We have succeeded in significantly reducing the differences in living conditions between eastern and western Germany. But structural differences remain,” she said.
“Further efforts are necessary,” she added.
The centrepiece of Saturday’s celebrations is a ceremony in Potsdam, just outside Berlin, led by President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, with 230 guests — about one-fifth of the audience originally planned.
Merkel acknowledged that the celebrations “will be quieter than the occasion would actually deserve.”