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  • 6
    days
    ago

    'Eternal' delays to airport, billion-dollar concert hall hit German reputation for efficiency

    Berlin's new airport was supposed to open in October 2011 but delay after delay and thousands of technical problems have made it a national joke. NBC News' Andy Eckardt reports.

    By Andy Eckardt and Carlo Angerer, NBC News

    BERLIN – Germans are world-famous for their efficiency, a stereotype both mocked and admired by their economically ailing European neighbors.

    But this hard-won reputation is now under threat after a catalog of calamities affecting major construction projects.

    Perhaps worst of all is what should already be the main airport for the capital, Berlin, which has been dubbed the “eternal” construction site by the U.K.-based Economist magazine and a “fiasco” by French newspaper Le Figaro.

    Udo Steffens, president of the Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, noted sadly that the international press had been asking, “What is it about Germany, this very efficient and effective economic power, are they not able to build a simple airport?"

    It was supposed to open in October 2011 but is now not expected to be finished until 2014 at the earliest. Some staff who were hired for the opening have already been laid off.

    Markus Schreiber / AP

    A fence shields the main terminal of the unfinished Willy Brandt Airport near Berlin. It was supposed to have opened in late 2011 but now isn't expected to open until at least 2014 -- the cost having doubled to nearly $6 billion.

    Then there’s Hamburg’s billion-dollar concert hall, ten times over budget and expected to open seven years late in 2017.

    And in Stuttgart, angry protests over the demolition of the old train station to make way for a new one put officials into a costly spin.

    They went back to the planning table, but after much discussion came back with a final design that was more expensive and much the same, according to a planning expert.

    Germans are starting to worry they are becoming something of a laughingstock, with the airport’s woes the chief embarrassment.

    "The entire republic, if not the entire world, is joking about the Berlin airport delay," said Ramona Pop, a Green Party leader in Berlin.

    The cost of the Willy Brandt Airport -- named after the former German chancellor and Nobel Peace Prize winner -- has more than doubled to nearly $6 billion. The head of Brandt’s foundation has complained that the great man’s name “shouldn't be associated with the planning errors.”

    It was supposed to have opened in late 2011 to cater for 30 million passengers a year, but today its visitors are mostly construction inspectors and safety experts.

    The new terminal is up and the runway is being used by budget airlines from nearby Schönefeld Airport.

    However, the fire protection system was installed incorrectly and there has been concern about an apparent shortage of check-in counters.

    Additionally, a court has questioned the safety of future flight routes that pass over a nuclear reactor, while another ruled the "noise protection is insufficient."

    The delays are hurting the 150 shops and restaurants that were supposed to open in the terminal.

    "Our store interior, worth approximately $70,000, is fully in place at the terminal and collecting dust," said Markus Heckhausen, general manager of lifestyle store Ampelmann.

    "We constantly renew our designs and in three to four years, the store furniture will probably be out of date," he added.

    Gregor Klaessig invested $550,000 in his Fish&Chips restaurant, hired staff and purchased kitchenware. With no income in sight, the staff had to be laid off.

    "I am shocked and have lost all faith in politicians," he said.

    As for the concert hall, city officials in 2001 confidently predicted they would build the Elbe Philharmonic by 2010 at a cost of about $105 million.

    Euroluftbild / EPA

    The illuminated terminal of the Willy Brandt Airport in October 2012. Managers are reportedly spending $6,000 per day on electricity because they are unable to turn off the lights at the facility.

    After a series of planning and construction failures, it has turned into a financial sinkhole with an estimated bill of more than $1 billion and a new opening date of 2017.

    Stuttgart’s new train station, meanwhile, was supposed to be a major new transportation hub for southwestern Germany.

    But when demolition work began on the old station in the fall of 2010, more than 50,000 people demonstrated against the project and dozens were injured when police used water cannons to break up the protest.

    Officials’ efforts to handle the uproar were hardly a model of efficiency, according to one expert.

    "If you look at what happened in Stuttgart, there was a huge round of mediation and participation, but the final result was the same project with a few modifications and even more expensive than it was before," said Professor Oliver Ibert, a planning expert at Free University Berlin.

    But Ibert said the current furor would eventually die down.

    "When the airport is open … I'm pretty sure the public discussion will be much calmer than it is today," he said.

    After all, few remember that the beautiful Neuschwanstein Castle -- the model for Sleeping Beauty Castle in Disneyland Park, California -- actually bankrupted Bavaria’s King Ludwig II in 1884.

    It attracts some 1.3 million visitors a year, although they soon discover it was never actually finished and only a few rooms are decorated.

    Related:

    Full Germany coverage from NBC News

    132 comments

    Seriously?!?! Germany had THREE, count'em, THREE projects that are behind schedule and over budget? We have three per day in every city in this country. Every other country is Europe is trying to borrow money from Germany to keep from going bankrupt. We should all have Germany's problems.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, europe, featured, willy-brandt, andy-eckardt, carlo-angerer, berlin-airport
  • Updated
    1
    Apr
    2013
    3:32pm, EDT

    Toy model of Jabba The Hutt's palace resembles a mosque, group says

    Lego

    Birol Kilic, chairman of the Turkish Cultural Association of Austria, says the Lego play set modeled on the Jabba The Hutt alien's fictional home was culturally insensitive.

    By Carlo Angerer, Producer, NBC News

    MUNICH – Danish toy maker Lego plans to stop selling a model of the “palace” of slug-like Star Wars character Jabba The Hutt after complaints that it resembles a revered mosque, according to a group that raised the grievance.

    Birol Kilic, chairman of the Turkish Cultural Association of Austria, said Monday the play set modeled on the obese alien’s fictional home was culturally insensitive.

    Photo by Julian Finney / Getty Images

    Birol Kilic, chairman of the Turkish Cultural Association of Austria, said the Lego version of Jabba The Hutt's palace resembles Istanbul's Hagia Sophia, a historic mosque that became a model for other centers of Islam and is now a museum.

    “This does not belong in children’s bedrooms,” he said. “And the minaret-like tower features machine guns. Children will become insensitive to violence and other cultures.”

    After a meeting between his organization and the company last week in Munich, Germany, Lego promised to stop selling the play set, Kilic said.

    Lego posted on Twitter Monday that it has always intended to stop selling the item at the end of the year. “We only keep a product in the assortment for a few years and it was scheduled to exit in 2013 from launch,” the tweet said.

    However, there was no mention of those original plans in a January press release which said: “The LEGO Group regrets that the product has caused the members of the Turkish cultural community to interpret it wrongly.”

    Roar Trangbæk, a Lego spokesman, on Monday denied that the group had anything to do with their decision.

    “The decision to terminate this particular product is not based on any dialogue with the mentioned community," Trangbæk said. "We regret the misinterpretation but we fully stand behind the product.”

    Trangbæk also said that it is the company's policy not to design models that depict religious structures. 

    The Danish toy giant has in recent years made building sets modeled on hit movies including Harry Potter, Indiana Jones, and Star Wars.

    In the 1983 science-fiction blockbuster “Return of the Jedi”, Jabba uses Princess Leia as his slave at the palace.

    @danbarker Actually not. We only keep a product in the assortment for a few years and it was scheduled to exit in 2013 from launch.

    — The LEGO Group (@LEGO_Group) April 1, 2013

    Lego

    Birol Kilic, chairman of the Turkish Cultural Association of Austria, says the Lego play set modeled on the Jabba the Hutt alien's fictional home was culturally insensitive.

    Kilic believed that the Lego version, aimed at 9- to 14-year-olds, resembles Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia, a historic mosque that became a model for other centers of Islam and is now a museum in the Turkish city.

    Kilic said his organization was notified of the issue by an outraged Austrian father, whose sister had given the Lego set to his son last Christmas. The father returned the toy to the store, Kilic said, and the Turkish Cultural Association petitioned Lego to drop the play set from its line-up.

    Kilic said the issue was not merely cultural, but also a reminder that parents should be more thoughtful about what toys their kids play with.

    “We’re not the Taliban of Vienna,” he said of his independent, Vienna-based organization with about 700 members, “but we do give thought to our country and our continent.”

     

    This story was originally published on Mon Apr 1, 2013 10:44 AM EDT

    670 comments

    My God. Now kids toys are causing Islam to get it's knickers in a knot. I guess this will start another riot. At least they did not say the Jabba the Hutt looked liked one of their own. However, the man who made the complaint's son got the toy for Christmas? What is wrong with this picture?

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    Explore related topics: turkey, germany, muslim, world, mosque, austria, family, star-wars, islam, lego, featured, updated, carlo-angerer
  • Updated
    1
    Mar
    2013
    8:40am, EST

    Vatican: Cardinals will meet Monday to discuss papal conclave date

    Now that Benedict XVI has officially stepped down from his reign as pope, the speculation about who will be next begins. NBC's Keir Simmons reports on some of the frontrunners, including Cardinal Scola of Milan and Cardinal Turkson of Ghana.

    By Claudio Lavanga and Carlo Angerer, NBC News

    ROME -- Roman Catholic cardinals will next week take the first step toward setting a date for a conclave that will elect a new pope, Vatican officials confirmed Friday.

    The cardinals will begin informal discussions of church issues, known as "general congregations," at 9:30 a.m. local time (3:30 a.m. ET) on Monday, a Vatican press spokesman said.

    At the top of their agenda will be the announcement of a date for the cardinals to enter the conclave – a closed, secret voting session held inside the Sistine Chapel that continues until they agree on a new leader for the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics.

    General congregations are the preliminary talks at which cardinals identify the key tasks facing the church, prior to the conclave at which they choose the best candidate suited to those tasks.

    The first general congregation will take place in the Vatican’s Paul VI hall, according to Cardinal Angelo Sodano, Dean of the College of Cardinals. 

    A second will take place at 5:00 p.m. local time (11 a.m. ET), he told reporters.

    The Vatican's announcement came a day after the papacy of Benedict XVI formally ended with his departure by helicopter to a temporary residence at Castel Gandolfo.

    It means the church is without a leader until the conclave has chosen a successor. 

    Benedict XVI is now officially known as the pope emeritus.

    Related:

    Cheers and tears as Benedict flies to temporary home in hilltop town

    Inside Castel Gandolfo, Benedict's spectacular temporary retirement home

    How the pope's retirement package compares to yours

    This story was originally published on Fri Mar 1, 2013 7:26 AM EST

    42 comments

    Papal Enclave Agenda: 1) Vote for new Pope. 2) Hide more pedophiles. 3) Keep women pregnant in the kitchen. 4) Deny gay rights. 5) High fives all around and break for lunch.

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  • 30
    Jan
    2013
    12:08pm, EST

    Has Cookie Monster gone bad? 44-pound chunk of German statue stolen

    Courtesy HAZ / Michael Thomas

    A ransom note signed by the "Cookie Monster" was sent to a German newspaper, along with a photograph of somebody dressed up as the "Sesame Street" character.

    By Carlo Angerer, Producer, NBC News

    MAINZ, Germany — When a famous 44-pound metal cookie was stolen from outside a German factory, there was one obvious suspect. But few would have expected the Cookie Monster himself to claim responsibility for the crime.

    The giant golden snack has been a landmark as part of a statue at leading cookie manufacturer Bahlsen's site in Hannover since 1913 until it vanished on Jan. 21.


    This week, the first clue emerged when a ransom note made up of letters cut from newspapers and signed by the "Cookie Monster" was sent to a local newspaper.

    The sender demanded that a shipment of cookies be sent to to a local children’s hospital. "The ones with milk chocolate, not the ones with dark chocolate or without chocolate," the letter read. 

    And should the request not be fulfilled? "The golden cookie would be sent to the trash can of Oscar the Grouch," the ransom note warned.

    An accompanying photo showed someone dressed up as the famous "Sesame Street" character taking a big bite from a golden cookie.

    Investigators are unsure whether it is the actual metal cookie missing from Bahlsen or just a hoax. "The ransom note and the photo have been forwarded to criminalists for investigation," a police spokesman in Hannover said.

    Police have received only one other tip: Witnesses reported having seen two men with a ladder working at the statue two weeks ago.

    Experts say the theft of the cookie could be connected to rising thefts of metal across Germany, as the value of bronze, iron and other metals has gone up significantly. In recent years, thieves have stolen electric cables, bells and even train tracks in Germany and other European countries.

    So far, there are only crumbly clues in the investigation, but the company has offered the equivalent of more than $1,300 for any information leading to the recovery of the historic golden cookie.

    Company boss Werner Bahlsen made a public appeal for the return of the cookie in a Wednesday news conference, adding, "We refuse to be  blackmailed."

    22 comments

    The sender demanded that a shipment of cookies be sent to to a local children’s hospital. "The ones with milk chocolate, not the ones with dark chocolate or without chocolate," the letter read. Sounds like an opportunity for a low cost PR stunt that will ensure loyalty of customers for years t …

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  • 28
    Sep
    2012
    4:44am, EDT

    'Lady whisperer': Cabbie's snaps of topless female passengers land him an exhibit

    "I didn't think I could become an up-and-coming artist at my old age," says taxi driver Hans-Jürgen Watzlawek, 68, whose photos of passengers' breasts have gone on display at a Berlin gallery.

    By Carlo Angerer, NBC News

    MUNICH, Germany – A Berlin taxi driver whose pictures of women exposing their breasts in the back of his cab are being displayed at a local art gallery insists that the black-and-white photographs are nice not naughty.

    "It's not about eroticism or sex, but about the breast as a female attribute," cab-driver-turned-artist Hans-Jürgen Watzlawek told NBC News.

    Known for its hip and cutting edge exhibitions and galleries, the Berlin art scene sees many edgy pieces of art. Nonetheless, in Europe's self-proclaimed art capital one can always find a new twist on modern art.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    It all started four years ago on a night shift when a regular customer told Watzlawek that she suspected she was pregnant because her breasts had grown.

    When he said he didn't believe her, she lifted her shirt and exposed her breasts. The cab driver, an avid amateur photographer who always carries a camera, asked if he could snap a picture. She agreed.

    How does the 68-year-old explain this openness? 

    "The cabin of a taxi has a certain intimacy, it's like in a confessional box," Watzlawek said. "Passengers often share their stories – especially during journeys at night."

    So over the last four years, he took 50 pictures of topless women. They posed for him after he asked a few who showed an interest in his photography, Watzlawek said, who added that he had never photographed their faces.

    Read more international stories on NBCNews.com

    "The project lives on anonymity; no woman I have asked has ever complained of sexism," he said.

    And he denied that some of the women were drunk when he pictured them, as tabloids have suggested.

    About half of the passengers he asked to pose agreed to do so after he told them that he hoped to run an exhibition.

    "I was surprised myself, but they told me that I seem trustworthy – maybe you could even call me a lady whisperer," he said.

    'A provocation'
    Compared to Berlin Art Week, which took place in the city's illustrious galleries earlier this month, Watzlawek's exhibition, which opened on September 20 at the Galeria Casablanca, is a low-key affair although it has attracted considerable attention.

    Gallery owner Zoltan Labas said the show, "Flash Berlin 0.1", has been well-received, especially by women, but admits it has been controversial.

    "Of course, it's a provocation and it touches the border between art and non-art," he said.

    "While the breasts are in the center of the pictures, the backgrounds tell the stories," Labas added. "You see the clothes and posture of the women, or who else is sitting in the cab – at times it's the boyfriend or husband."

    Read more stories from Germany on NBCNews.com

    Watzlawek is not alone in his unconventional approach to routine places.

    Recently, garbage collectors in Hamburg remade a waste container into a pinhole camera to snap the city's streets. It was a successful public relations stunt that won a silver lion at the Cannes International Advertising Festival.

    Watzlawek, who is retired but returns to the steering wheel for a couple of nights each month, insists that his exhibition was not a public relations stunt.

    "I just want to finance my expensive photography hobby which is difficult with my small pension," he said.

    So after several decades working nights as a baker and cab driver he seems to have found his calling, although he doesn't think he's destined to become the next Damien Hirst or Andy Warhol.

    "I didn't think I could become an up-and-coming artist at my old age," he said.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • 'Lady whisperer': Cabbie's snaps of topless women go on exhibit
    • Officials: Terrorist groups in Libya tried to unite
    • Women on ballot in Palestinian city's 1st election in decades
    • 'Overwhelmed' aid agencies seek $340M to help Syria refugees
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    • Stay informed: Sign up for our newsletter

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and 

     

     

    105 comments

    Images of war violence: OK Picture of human breast: NEVER

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  • 12
    Sep
    2012
    6:55am, EDT

    Despite dark past, young Israelis seek new lives in German capital

    Nearly 70 years after the Holocaust was planned and executed in Berlin, there has been an influx of young Israelis to the city. "In Israel, you must struggle, you struggle every day," one recent arrival says. NBC News' Carlo Angerer reports.

    By Carlo Angerer, NBC News

    BERLIN, Germany -- Israeli Zeev Avrahami stands in the small kitchen of his restaurant peeling eggs and dripping fresh olive oil on a plate of hummus he is about to serve. The restaurant's name -- 'Sababa,' which is slang for good or fun -- is written proudly in Hebrew letters over its entrance.

    Nearly 70 years after the Holocaust was planned and executed in the German capital and Nazi atrocities nearly extinguished Jewish life on the European continent, Avrahami's eatery is a sign of a new chapter of Jewish life in Germany.

    Avrahami is at the culinary forefront of an influx of Israelis who have moved Berlin in recent years. Officials at the Israeli Embassy estimate that about 15,000 of its citizens now live in the city, thought to be the highest number in decades.

    'They don't know what to say'
    Before the Holocaust about 160,000 Jews called Berlin home. By the time the city was liberated by the Red Army in 1945, only 8,000 remained. 

    And while Avrahami feels safe in Berlin, his interactions with German citizens are often burdened by the past.

    "Once you say you're Israeli, there is silence. They don't know what to say," he told NBC News. "In Germany, it's still hard to be different, a foreigner. It's not an immigration country, it's not America."

    What is attracting young Israelis to the former center of Nazi Germany? Even today, synagogues, Jewish schools, and other buildings linked to the community across Germany are under constant police protection amid fears of attacks by right-wing and Islamist groups.

    Carlo Angerer / NBC News

    The Sababa restaurant in central Berlin is a small sign of a new chapter of Jewish life in Germany.

    Israeli insurance salesman Ilan Weiss, who moved to Berlin in 1990, believes the increasing cost of living and cuts to social services in his homeland -- as well as Berlin's image as a hip and multicultural destination -- is behind the trend.

    Weiss, who runs the the non-profit IsraelisinBerlin.de website, said that some new arrivals "show up with only a suitcase."

    "I get requests from new arrivals or Israelis looking to move to Berlin nearly every week," Weiss added. "It’s hard to live in the country where they come from, so the people come to Germany, where it's better than the rest of Europe, even than the U.S."

    Economic woes
    Among the incomers is Inbal Mayan, who came to Berlin about 4 months ago. The 31-year-old Tel Aviv native says daily life in her homeland has become difficult to afford for many young Israelis, even if they work two or three jobs.

    Mayan says that even though Berlin is famous for its easy-going lifestyle, the economy is a key factor for many Israelis. "It's not about the partying anymore, but it's about life that you can actually live and afford and not to struggle every day to have money, to live a simple life," she said. "In Israel you must struggle, you struggle every day."

    More Germany coverage from NBCNews.com

    She now takes German courses at the local Jewish community's language school and hopes to attend university and get a Master’s degree.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Fellow language student Bar Ben-Yehuda arrived one-and-a-half years ago from the outskirts of Jerusalem.

    "Here we have the opportunity for a better life, we can build something," he said. "The opportunities are better here than in Israel – I’m very sad to say this, because that's my country, but it’s the truth."

    But sooner or later, Berlin's dark past creeps in as reminders of Jewish life destroyed by the Holocaust are evident throughout the city, from the massive Holocaust memorial to so called 'Stolpersteine' (stumbling blocks), commemorative metal plaques installed in front of former homes of Jews deported to concentration camps.

    'You have to deal with it'
    Restaurant owner Avrahami, who has been living in Berlin for four years, says the German capital becomes a spirital place for many Israelis.

    "A lot of arrivals, because they're so young, they don't see that but there is something that pulls you down," he told NBC News. "At the beginning you don’t pay attention to the signs, but it creeps in you all the time. At some point you have to deal with it."

    More Israel coverage from NBCNews.com

    Israeli Nirit Bialer, 34, moved to Berlin six years ago and helped to start the group Habait, 'home' in Hebrew, hopes to bring Germans and Israelis together through cultural events and creating a place for enhanced dialogue between the two groups.

    Young Germans tend to be not as preoccupied with the burden of the country's dark past as their parents' generation.

    "Berlin is a very cosmopolitan city," Bialer says. "It's not necessarily this gray dark place that we are taught from history." 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • No Obama-Netanyahu meeting as rift over Iran widens
    • Where is China's heir-apparent? Rumors abound
    • Dead Guantanamo detainee had been cleared for release
    • 100 most endangered species listed; worth saving?
    • Afghan Taliban made $400 million last year, UN estimates
    • Records: US, UK hushed up Soviet WWII killing of 22,000 Poles
    • Iran sanctions working, except where it counts

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    128 comments

    Good for them. Not all Germans were Nazis!

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  • 7
    Aug
    2012
    4:24am, EDT

    'Life doesn't stop with retirement': Are these German protesters the world's oldest squatters?

    Plans to close a seniors' center in a building that was used by East Germany's Stasi spies during the Cold War have prompted its elderly patrons to take action: They've occupied the building. NBC News' Carlo Angerer reports from Berlin.

    By Carlo Angerer, NBC News

    BERLIN – Ranging in age from 55 to 96, a group of fed-up German retirees may be the world's oldest squatters.

    They have occupied their local seniors' center in Berlin-Pankow, a formerly Communist district of the German capital, since local officials announced it would be shut by early July.

    With its intermittent hot water and creaking hardwood floors, the villa -- which was used by East German Stasi spies during the Cold War -- is not the most comfortable place to stay overnight. 

    The protesters had planned to stay for only a few nights hoping for a quick offer by the city. The group’s 72-year-old leader Doris Syrbe admits that they were unprepared at the beginning.


    "We didn’t know what to expect," Syrby told NBC News. "All of us were citizens of East Germany, where it wasn’t routine to get up on the barricades. And even now, politicians tell us that we are operating out of limits."

    Before the action started, the center was a place to get together and do exercise, play chess and even celebrate momentous occasions such as one couple’s 50-year wedding anniversary.

    The demonstrators are afraid that the building will be sold off and torn down to make room for more of the high-rent houses that already dominate the neighborhood, and their community split up with members sent to different locations.

    Carlo Angerer / NBC News

    Doris Syrbe, 72, leads a group of retirees struggling to keep open a community center in Berlin.

    And worried that the city would lock them out, the retirees decided to occupy the house. More than a month later, they remain.

    A retired teacher's courageous crusade: Tackling neo-Nazi hate

    Now big posters draped on the street-front fence declare "Hands off!" and "This house is occupied," reminiscent of the Occupy Wall Street movement.

    'Just don't get sick'
    At least seven of the retirees representing the center's 300 regular users have stayed every night since the end of June, sleeping on old mattresses, camping beds and sun loungers. 


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    But after a couple of weeks they have become highly organized with plans for when a person can spend a night at home once a week or at what time newspaper reporters and camera teams can visit.The elderly squatters have enjoyed widespread support from neighbors, political activists, local media and their families. "They are proud of us and tell us to hang in there, just don't get sick," one of the occupiers said.

    With no acceptable offer by the city in sight, Syrbe said the occupiers are now in for the long haul. "We want to stay together," she said. "The city has not even been able to find room for all of our groups."

    From Cold Warriors to targeting trafficking: US military shifts focus in Europe

    City officials say they can no longer afford the annual operating costs of about $73,000 and an imminent renovation which would cost more than $3 million. The retirees counter that those estimates are artificially inflated and say the community center is vital to its 300 visitors, many of whom get a pension that barely covers the cost of living in Berlin.

    To make ends meet and to finance at least a short vacation with his wife, 71-year-old occupier Peter Klotsche says he has to work for two days a week on tourist buses. He says that after working and paying taxes for decades, the retirees should get at least something in return.

    'Forest Boy' mystery solved: Man admits lies over identity

    "We don’t want to be ignored and sit at home in front of the television all the time," Klotsche said adding that the building is the only place for many to stay active and have a vital social life at an old age. "Life doesn’t stop with retirement."

    Carlo Angerer / NBC News

    Peter Klotsche, 71, says that after working and paying taxes for decades, retirees like him should get something in return.

    But a solution seems out of sight after the city cut the telephone lines and even sent a worker in the early morning hours to change the locks to the basement, which barred access to its gym. The seniors complain that there is little communication from the city.

    Bye, bye, GI: Deep impact for many Germans as US troop downsize

    Local politician Lioba Zürn-Kasztantowicz, who announced the center's closure, told NBC News that the city hardly has a choice due to budget pressures.

    "The money just isn’t there anymore," she said. "There is less and less wiggle room, when it comes to voluntary social services."

    More stories from Germany on NBCNews.com

    Zürn-Kaztantowicz said that there are no current plans to clear the squatters from the site. "But I can’t say if that decision will hold," she added.

    The squatters say they will remain in the building until the city promises to keep the center open or a substitute building that could house their community is found.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Race to London's Olympic Park: Fastest way is ...?
    • Interpol drops 'red notice' for dissident
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    63 comments

    LOVE it! Hang in there with your peaceful protest!!!

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    Explore related topics: germany, europe, elderly, retirees, berlin, stasi, carlo-angerer

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