Some 8,000 helium balloons have been released into the night sky
over Germany's capital at the culmination of events to mark the 25th
anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Earlier, Chancellor Angela Merkel said the fall of the wall had
shown the world that dreams could come true.
Tens of thousands of people attended events, including a
"citizen's party" at the Brandenburg Gate.
The Berlin Wall was built in 1961 to stop people fleeing the
communist East.
Its fall in 1989 became a powerful symbol of the end of the Cold
War.
The white balloons - perched on 3.6m poles to match the height
of the wall and stretching for 15km (nine miles) - were released one by one to
symbolise the breaching of the wall by crowds of protesters.
The Berlin State Orchestra under Daniel Barenboim played
Beethoven's Ninth Symphony "Ode to Joy" in front of the Brandenburg
Gate.
"We're the happiest people in the world and we're thrilled
that you brought the Berlin Wall down 25 years ago," said the Mayor of
Berlin, Klaus Wowereit, as the first balloons were sent aloft.
"Nothing and no-one can stand in the way of freedom."
The release came amid a massive open-air party at the
Brandenburg Gate. Earlier at the party, UK performer Peter Gabriel sang a
version of David Bowie's Heroes.
At the scene: Damian McGuiness, BBC News
For a weekend the balloons had become a part of the city, with
Berliners strolling, jogging or cycling along the route.
Today not much of the Wall remains, and often you don't even
notice when crossing between East and West. That's because, after 1989,
Berliners wanted to destroy the much-hated barrier and rebuild their city.
But suddenly seeing the circuitous and often illogical line
which tore through the city's heart was a reminder of the insanity of using
concrete to split a city in two, dividing neighbourhoods, friends and families.
Now the balloons have floated off into the sky, each one
accompanied by cheers from the crowd - a shining and delicate symbol of peace
and light, in stark contrast to the brutality of the heavy slabs of grey
concrete. And a powerful reminder of how 25 years ago, under pressure from
ordinary Berliners, this deadly barrier suddenly lost its threat.
'We can change things'
The day's events began with a brass band playing, evoking the
trumpets which brought down the walls of the biblical city of Jericho.
Chancellor Merkel, who grew up in East Germany, and other
officials laid roses in one of the remaining sections of the wall.
Speaking at the opening of a new information centre about the
Wall, Ms Merkel said it was easy to forget what had happened and it was
important to remember it.
"We can change things for the better," she said.
"This is the message for... Ukraine, Iraq and other places where human rights
are threatened.
"The fall of the Wall showed us that dreams can come true.
Nothing has to stay as it is."
Recently Ms Merkel has revealed more details about her movements
on the day that the Wall opened.
She told German TV on Saturday that she joined crowds heading
towards West Berlin after a visit to the sauna, describing "an incredible
feeling of happiness".
The chancellor was joined later at the Brandenburg Gate by
former Polish trade union leader and president Lech Walesa and Mikhail
Gorbachev, the last Soviet leader.
The anniversary was also mentioned in an address by Pope Francis
in Rome.
He told crowds in St Peter's Square: "Where there is a
wall, there is a closing of hearts. We need bridges, not walls."
The wall stretched for 155km (96 miles) through Berlin but today
only about three kilometres of it still stands.
At least 138 people died trying to flee to West Berlin.
Within a year of the wall's collapse, Germany - divided after
its defeat in World War Two - was reunited.
Striking a sombre note, Mr Gorbachev, 83, warned on Saturday
that the world was on the brink of a new Cold War.
Tensions between the West and Russia have been raised by the
crisis in Ukraine, which was part of the Soviet Union.
"Bloodshed in Europe and the Middle East against the
backdrop of a breakdown in dialogue between the major powers is of enormous
concern," he said.
"The world is on the brink of a new Cold War. Some are even
saying that it's already begun."
Mr Gorbachev, as leader of the USSR in the late 1980s, is
credited with rapprochement with the West and creating a more liberal
atmosphere which led to the collapse of communist regimes in Eastern Europe in
1989.
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