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Friday April 26, 2024

Russia tells Czechs to hand over dismantled statue of commander

By Newsdesk
April 11, 2020

MOSCOW: Russia has told the Czech Republic to hand over the statue of a prominent Soviet military commander that was dismantled in Prague last week despite Moscow’s protests, escalating a rancorous diplomatic dispute over the issue.

The statue to Marshal Ivan Konev, who led Red Army forces during World War Two that drove Nazi troops from Czechoslovakia, is reviled by some in Prague as a symbol of the decades of Communist rule that followed the war.

But in Moscow Konev is lionised by authorities as a war hero, and the removal of his statue was cast as a diplomatic insult and part of what Russia sees as a dangerous attempt to rewrite history.

The statue to Konev, who also played a leading role in crushing the 1956 Hungarian uprising and building the Berlin Wall in 1961, was taken down on April 3 by municipal Prague authorities who said they planned to put it in a museum.

But Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu has appealed to Czech Defence Minister Lubomír Metnar to intercede, the Russian defence ministry said, asking that the statue be sent back to Moscow.

Russia would be prepared to pay for transport or any other costs, the ministry said. “We expect information from you about the place and time of its handing over,” Shoigu said in a defence ministry statement late on Thursday.

The Czech Foreign Ministry said it was up to the Prague district municipality where the statue had been located to decide what to do. “If the municipality decides to give it to the Russian authorities - that is up to them to decide,” a spokeswoman said. The Czech Defence Ministry and Prague city hall could not immediately be reached for comment. The statue has for years been the centre of controversy in Prague. It has been repeatedly vandalised and moves by municipal authorities to cover it up with tarpaulin sparked anger among local pro-Russian residents.