Friday, November 6, 2009

BERLIN | Fans hoping to catch a glimpse Thursday of U2’s free concert celebrating the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall were outraged to find that a 12-foot metal barrier had been installed to block the view for those without tickets.

Berliners and tourists alike saw the irony in building a wall around a concert dedicated to the wall that came down.

“It’s completely ridiculous that they are blocking the view,” said Louis-Pierre Boily, 23, of Quebec City, who said he had come to Berlin even though he had failed to get tickets for the concert. “I thought it’s a free show, but MTV probably wants people to watch it on TV to get their ratings up.”



Mr. Boily was among several hundred people who gathered Thursday against the new fence, which was draped with a white tarp that blocked the view of the stage from the street. Some fans tried to tear down the tarp before the concert, which was being held in front of Berlin’s iconic Brandenburg Gate.

The music network MTV, which organized Thursday’s concert, said it worked with the local promoter, the city and Berlin police to install a temporary fence “around the site to ensure the safety and security of the attendees at the event as well as residents and businesses in the area.”

U2’s publicist, RMP, refused comment about the barrier.

About 10,000 tickets were made available online for the Irish rockers’ free show — and they were snapped up in just three hours.

U2 was performing four songs, but only one song was being shown later on television Thursday as part of MTV’s European Music Awards, according to MTV.

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The Berlin Wall fell on Nov. 9, 1989, ending almost 30 years of Cold War division between the communist East and democratic West.

Throughout those decades, the Brandenburg Gate stood just inside then-East Berlin. In 1988, musicians including Pink Floyd and Michael Jackson performed in a three-day “Berlin Rock Marathon” on the western side of the concrete barrier, with the landmark as a backdrop.

Concertgoers in the West hurled bottles and firebombs at the wall, while about 2,000 youths gathered on the eastern side to listen, many shouting, “The wall must go!”

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