Werner Eberlein

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General Secretary
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Werner Eberlein
Eberlein in 1986
Chairman of the
Central Party Control Commission
In office
8 November 1989  3 December 1989
General Secretary
Deputy
Preceded byErich Mückenberger
Succeeded byPosition abolished
First Secretary of the
Socialist Unity Party in Bezirk Magdeburg
In office
22 June 1983  12 November 1989
Second Secretary
  • Walter Kirnich
Preceded byKurt Tiedke
Succeeded byWolfgang Pohl
Volkskammer
Member of the Volkskammer
for Magdeburg
In office
16 June 1986  11 January 1990
Preceded byMulti-member district
Succeeded byKarl-Heinz Richtetzky
Personal details
BornWerner Eberlein
(1919-11-09)9 November 1919
Died11 October 2002(2002-10-11) (aged 82)
PartySED (1948–1989)
PDS (1989–2002)
Parents
RelativesKlaus Huhn (half-brother)
Alma mater
Occupation
  • Politician
  • Party Functionary
  • Interpreter
  • Journalist
Awards
Central institution membership

Other offices held

Werner Eberlein (9 November 1919 – 11 October 2002) was a German politician and high-ranking party functionary of the Socialist Unity Party (SED).

Rising to prominence as Russian interpreter to state and party leader Walter Ulbricht, he served as the First Secretary of the SED in Bezirk Magdeburg and as a member of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the SED in the 80s.

Soviet Union exile

His father, Hugo Eberlein, was one of the founding members of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) at the end of 1918.[1] After being imprisoned in France, Hugo Eberlein was in exile in Moscow in Hotel Lux from autumn 1936 and, like many other German emigrants in the Soviet Union, became a victim of Stalin's Great Terror.[2][3][4]

Werner Eberlein had to emigrate to the Soviet Union to live with his stepmother Inna Armand in 1934. After his father death, he was exiled from the Lux, spending eight years in Siberia - known as "Wolodja" - and only returning to Germany in 1948.[2][5]

He worked as press officer for the SED party executive committee and, after attending the CPSU's Moscow Higher Party School from 1951 to 1954, as a journalist for the SED Zentralorgan newspaper Neues Deutschland.[2]

Political career

Later life and death

References

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