4/3/2009, 9:05 pm

Friday, April 3, 2009 - A nationally-significant statue of Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin in front of St. Petersburg's Finland railway station was bombed by vandals early on Wednesday morning (i.e., April 1 - Fools Day and the 4th anniversary of the People's Cube - Red Square)
The explosion damaged the monument from behind leaving a large and unsightly hole. The force of the explosive device was equivalent to about 300 grams of TNT, according to the St. Petersburg police press office.
"No matter how anyone may feel about certain parts of our history, on a human level [this act of vandalism] is a crime against a remarkable piece of monumental art, a classic of the Soviet period," said Vera Dementyeva, the head of the St. Petersburg Monument Protection Committee (KGIOP), reported Interfax.
On Wednesday it emerged that an organization by the name of the 'Zalessky Flying Battle Group' had taken responsibility for the act, Interfax said.
However, on Thursday the Russian Police Ministry said had no information that the organization had anything to do with the explosion. Pavel Klimovsky, deputy head of the ministry's press-service, said that information on the internet linking the group to the explosion could simply be "self-promotion".
The organization is illegal and not officially registered anywhere. In December last year they took responsibility for the destruction of a statue of Lenin in the city of Ryazan, Interfax said.
Meanwhile, the explosion has provoked indignation in Communist circles.
Vladimir Fyodorov, head of St. Petersburg Communist party office, drew several conclusions from the incident.
"First of all, it is not normal that any explosion can take place so easily in the center of a large city, especially near its busiest railway station," Fyodorov said.
"Secondly, such a situation does the country's current administration no favors as it leads to the feeling that if a monument is destroyed today because of the figure's politics, in the future, someone may target living people with such views," he said.
Fyodorov said the Communist party had previously requested security for the monument after it suffered a smaller act of vandalism when someone placed a sable into Lenin's hand. However, no such measures had been implemented, he said.
Vadim Tyulpanov, speaker of St. Petersburg's Legislative Assembly, said in his comment on the case that the city's deputies have in the past suggested toughening the penalties for vandalism.
"I see the incident as the act of vandalism toward one of the city's monuments. We've long been pressing for tougher punishments for such crimes," Tyulpanov said.
Meanwhile, representatives of the city's human rights organization, Memorial, said monuments to founders of the Soviet system had no place in Russian cities.
Irina Flige, head of Memorial's scientific and research center, argued that the only effective method to combat acts of vandalism against statues of Lenin is to remove them altogether.
[ ... ]

No word from the local Communist Party or government officials with regards to their opinion on whether the 1917 takeover of Winter Palace in their city by a mob of drunken sailors acting on Lenin's instructions, followed by the destruction of the entire country including untold numbers of historical monuments, could be qualified as vandalism - and how tough the penalty for that should be.


UPDATE:
Another Lenin monument was blown up a couple of days later in Lugansk, Ukraine (no information in the English-language media yet). The Russian media suggests that the timing is explained by the approaching Lenin's birthday on April 22 - a day that the international progressives have turned into celebrating Earth Day.






