On 19 February 1946, Der Augenzeuge (The Eyewitness), a weekly newsreel, premiered in cinemas in the Soviet Occupation Zone. The production was handled by the German film company DEFA that would later become the leading film company of the German Democratic Republic.

The programme was created to reorient and renew German cinema in the Soviet Occupation Zone. The broadcasts aired every week and passed Soviet military administration censorship. Kurt Maetzig, one of the founders of DEFA, served as editor-in-chief of the newsreels for the first six months. In autumn 1947, he was succeeded by his wife, the journalist Marion Keller. The name “The Eyewitness” was her idea.
In the first two years, the audience reached four million viewers a week. “The Eyewitness” stood out thanks to a section about children searching for their missing parents, which started every broadcast from the 12th to the 137th (1946-1948). The programme helped 400 children to find their parents.
The newsreel broadcast weekly until 19 December 1980. Each episode lasted for 15 minutes.
Source:
The Living Museum Online (LeMO) – the online portal on German history.