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How population decline is exposing Germany's old divides
Key takeaways
- How population decline is exposing Germany's old divides
- By Jessica Parker Berlin correspondent Jan-Niklas Hustedt remembers going to techno parties in the abandoned canteen of a pump factory that had drastically downsized after reunification, in his hometown of Oschersleben.
- He was born in East Germany in 1989, just a few weeks before the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Why this matters: a developing story that could shape the day's news cycle.
How population decline is exposing Germany's old divides
By Jessica Parker Berlin correspondent Jan-Niklas Hustedt remembers going to techno parties in the abandoned canteen of a pump factory that had drastically downsized after reunification, in his hometown of Oschersleben.
He was born in East Germany in 1989, just a few weeks before the fall of the Berlin Wall. He describes himself as a "wendekind"; a child of the turning point.
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