From the BBC:
"Ukraine nationalists tear down Kharkiv's Lenin statue"
^ You really can't blame the Ukrainians (or anyone who faced arrest, deportation, murder under the Soviet dictatorship that Lenin created.) I have seen the footage many times before throughout Eastern Europe and Central Asia. I know that Russia gets furious when these things happen, but what do they expect? Lenin was an ethnic Russian and the Kyiv Government (the majority of whom all lived under Moscow's tight control in the Soviet Union) is fighting ethnic-Russian terrorists in the eastern part of their country not to mention the fact that Russia itself invaded and annexed the Crimea. To the Ukraine (and the rest of the world) it is Russian/Soviet history repeating itself. The Ukrainians have had 20 + years of freedom from Russian domination and do not want to go back and this is one symbolic gesture to show that determination. They may not be able to defeat the Russian military but they can do other acts with just as much meaning and power as a gun. ^
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-29405089
"Ukraine nationalists tear down Kharkiv's Lenin statue"
Nationalists have torn down a statue
of Lenin in the centre of Ukraine's second-largest city, Kharkiv, in a move
supported by officials. People cheered and leapt for joy as the statue came crashing down.
Pro-Russian demonstrators in the
largely Russian-speaking city defended the statue in February, when
President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted. Kharkiv escaped the violent unrest which swept through east Ukraine's other
regions, Donetsk and Luhansk. A fragile ceasefire has been in place for weeks between pro-Russian
separatists in those two regions. On Sunday night, when nationalist protesters had already gathered around the
statue for a "Kharkiv is Ukraine" rally, the governor of Kharkiv region, Ihor
Baluta, signed an order to dismantle the statue. Some correspondents say the order was probably a last-minute face-saving
move. Ukrainian Interior Minister Arsen Avakov wrote on Facebook (in
Russian) that he had given orders for police to ensure only the safety of
people, "not the idol". "Lenin? Let him fall..." he wrote. "As long as people don't get hurt. As long
as this bloody communist idol does not take more victims with it when it
goes." However, Ukrainian media reported that police had begun an investigation into
"vandalism". One protester was reportedly injured in the head as the statue was
dismantled.^ You really can't blame the Ukrainians (or anyone who faced arrest, deportation, murder under the Soviet dictatorship that Lenin created.) I have seen the footage many times before throughout Eastern Europe and Central Asia. I know that Russia gets furious when these things happen, but what do they expect? Lenin was an ethnic Russian and the Kyiv Government (the majority of whom all lived under Moscow's tight control in the Soviet Union) is fighting ethnic-Russian terrorists in the eastern part of their country not to mention the fact that Russia itself invaded and annexed the Crimea. To the Ukraine (and the rest of the world) it is Russian/Soviet history repeating itself. The Ukrainians have had 20 + years of freedom from Russian domination and do not want to go back and this is one symbolic gesture to show that determination. They may not be able to defeat the Russian military but they can do other acts with just as much meaning and power as a gun. ^
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-29405089
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