Alexander Schalck-Golodkowski
Schalck-Golodkowski in 1988
Head of the KoKo
State Secretary in the
Ministry for Foreign Trade
[lower-alpha 1]
In office
7 December 1966  6 December 1989
Minister
Deputy
  • Horst Roigk
  • Manfred Seidel
Preceded byHorst Roigk
Succeeded byKarl-Heinz Gerstenberger (acting)
Personal details
Born(1932-07-03)3 July 1932
Treptow, Berlin, Free State of Prussia, Weimar Republic
(now Germany)
Died21 June 2015 (2015-06-22) (aged 82)
Rottach-Egern, Bavaria, Germany
Political partySocialist Unity Party
(1955–1989)
Spouses
Margareta Becker
(m. 1955; div. 1975)
    Sigrid Gutmann
    (m. 1976)
    Children2
    Alma materHochschule für Außenhandel
    Juristische Hochschule des MfS
    Occupation
    • Politician
    • Civil Servant
    • Businessman
    • Precision Mechanic
    Awards
    Central institution membership

    Other offices held

    Alexander Schalck-Golodkowski (3 July 1932 – 21 June 2015) was a politician and trader in the German Democratic Republic. He was director of a main department ('Hauptverwaltungsleiter') in the Ministry for Foreign Trade and German Domestic Trade (1956–62), the Deputy Minister for External Trade (1967–75), and head of the GDR's Kommerzielle Koordinierung (KoKo, 1966–86).[1]

    Early life

    He was born in Berlin to a stateless ethnic Russian father and adopted by the Schalcks when he was eight years old. His biological father served as a Tsarist officer in World War I and became the head of the Wehrmacht's Russian language interpreter school in World War II; he did not return from Soviet captivity. His maternal grandfather worked for Stinnes in St. Petersburg.[2]

    Schalck-Golodkowsky joined the Free German Youth in 1951 and the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands, SED) in 1955.

    Career in East Germany

    In 1966 he was appointed head of KoKo (at that time a newly formed department of the Ministry for Foreign Trade, ten years later it would formally become a powerful independent government agency in its own right) and in 1967 was also appointed a special officer of the Ministry of State Security.

    In 1983 he led the negotiations with Bavarian leader Franz Josef Strauß to obtain a billion Deutschmarks loan from the West German government.

    He was appointed to the central committee of the SED in 1986 and, under suspicion of misusing his powers at KoKo he fled to West Berlin in December 1989. He was briefly imprisoned before settling in Bavaria.

    Post-reunification activities

    Following reunification, the actions of KoKo and of Schalck-Golodkowski head were investigated on suspicions of espionage activities, tax evasion, fraud, breaking embargo regulations and offences against Allied military law. He was prosecuted in 1996 for breaking Allied law and sentenced to a year's probation; other charges were withdrawn due to his ill-health—he had operations to remove cancers in 1987 and 1997.

    He had been married twice and had two children.

    See also

    References

    1. www.dhm.de/lemo/ biography (in German)
    2. munzinger.de biography (in German)
    1. "Deputy Minister for Foreign Trade" from 1967 until 1975


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