Albania Albania's Institute for Communist Crimes (ICC) proposed a ban on
communist-era films, sparking hostile reactions from the public.
Brazil In 2016,
Eduardo Bolsonaro, a federal deputy for São Paulo and the son of then-deputy and future president
Jair Bolsonaro, proposed a bill to criminalize the promotion of communism. The draft proposed that offenders be given two to five years in prison and a fine if they manufacture, commercialize, distribute or convey symbols or propaganda that use the hammer or sickle or any other means of dissemination favourable to communism. , the bill is in the Constitution and Justice Commission of the Chamber of Deputies of Brazil.
Bulgaria In
Bulgaria, lawmakers voted on the first reading of a proposed law on 24 November 2016 to make the public display of communist symbols illegal. The law, known as the "Criminal Nature of the Communist Regime", requires that signs and items created during the communist regime glorifying the former communist party and its leaders be removed from public places. The proposal, however, was never put to a second reading, never signed by the
President of Bulgaria nor published in Bulgaria's
State Gazette and hence never became law. Both the parliamentary session and convocation in which the law was proposed later ended, thus rendering the proposal dead.
Estonia In early 2007, the
Riigikogu was proceeding with a draft bill amending the Penal Code to make the public use of Soviet and Nazi symbols punishable if used in a manner disturbing the public peace or inciting hatred. The bill did not come into effect as it passed only the first reading in the Riigikogu. In 2015, Estonia's Justice Ministry drafted a bill that would ban explicitly both Communist and Nazi symbols, however, the law did not pass. Estonia did not ban symbols themselves, but since the early 2000s, laws against promoting totalitarian regimes were established and propaganda of Soviet symbols became in practice restricted.
European Union In January 2005,
Vytautas Landsbergis, backed by other Members of the
European Parliament, such as
József Szájer from Hungary, urged a ban on the communist symbols in the
European Union, in addition to
Nazi symbols. In February 2005, the
European Commission rejected calls for a proposed Europe-wide ban on Nazi symbols to be extended to cover communist symbols as well, on the basis that it was not appropriate to deal with this issue in rules aimed at combatting racism. However, this rejection did not rule out the individual member states having their own laws in this respect. In December 2010, the European Commission published a report titled "The memory of the crimes committed by totalitarian regimes in Europe" addressed to the European Parliament and the
Council of the European Union, in which it mentions the banning of communist symbols by some member states (Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, and Lithuania) and concludes that "the European Union has a role to play, within the scope of its powers in this area, to contribute to the processes engaged in the Member States to face up to the legacy of totalitarian crimes". In September 2019, the European Parliament approved a joint motion for a "
resolution on the importance of European remembrance for the future of Europe" with 535 votes in favour, 66 against and 52 abstentions. Specifically, in points 17 and 18 of the resolution, "expresses concern about the continued use of symbols belonging to totalitarian systems in the public sphere and for commercial purposes", as well as noting "the continued existence in public spaces in some Member States of monuments and memorials (parks, squares, streets etc.) glorifying totalitarian regimes, which paves the way for the distortion of historical facts about the consequences of the Second World War and for the propagation of the totalitarian political system".
Romania Law 51/2026, (article 3. h) on the National Security of Romania considers the following as threats to national security: "the initiation, organisation, perpetration, or the supporting in any way of the totalitarian or extremist actions of a communist, fascist, iron guardist, or of any other origin, of the racial, anti-Semitic, revisionist, separatist actions that can endanger in any way the unity and territorial integrity of Romania, as well as the instigation to deeds that can put in, danger the order of the state governed by the rule of law". However, symbols are not specifically mentioned in the law. On 22 December 2025, the
Save Romania Union (USR) proposed to outlaw communist symbols in public places, with penalties ranging from 3 to 10 years in prison for communist organizations and 3 months to 3 years for communist propaganda. == See also ==