Armenia In 1991, the Lenin monument was removed from
Republic Square in
Yerevan, after he was beheaded. The
pedestal of the monument remained standing until 1996.
Bulgaria In December 2023, the
Monument to the Soviet Army in downtown
Sofia was partially dismantled and set to be put in the
Museum of Socialist Art. As of March 2024, it has yet to be put in the museum or replaced with a new monument.
Czech Republic In April 2020, a statue of Soviet Marshal
Ivan Konev was removed from
Prague, which prompted criminal investigation by Russian authorities who considered it an insult. The Mayor of Prague's
sixth municipal district, Ondřej Kolář, announced on
Prima televize that he would be under police protection after a Russian man made attempts on his life. Prime Minister
Andrej Babiš condemned that as foreign interference, while
Kremlin Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov dismissed allegations of Russian involvement as "another hoax".
Finland Since the collapse of the USSR there was active debate regarding the fate of the Soviet symbols that were received as gifts. For example, the
World peace sculpture, gifted to Finland by the USSR in 1990, has been vandalized several times during its existence. Since Russia attacked Ukraine in 2022 the discussion of removing these symbols started to intensify. Statues of Lenin were removed from
Turku and
Kotka supposedly as "a gesture of solidarity" for Ukraine. The World Peace sculpture was also removed from
Helsinki (the official reason was that it needed to be relocated due to roadworks). The name of
Lenin Park will be changed in the future. Critics have considered the latest moves as harmful since history will be erased by these actions. It can also be asked if the erasure can be logically argued as
Lenin and
Putin are representing different ideologies. There has been some criticism from the political right-wing regarding the history of the elderly Social Democrats who some accuse of spying for the
Stasi. The so-called
Tiitinen list has been discussed and the right-wing has demanded it be declassified.
Kyrgyzstan On 7 June 2025,
Kyrgyz authorities took down a statue of
Lenin in the second largest city of
Osh, which is also the tallest Lenin statue in
Central Asia.
Poland Since 1989, Poland has taken down hundreds of Soviet monuments due to the negative reputation the Soviet Union has in Poland. Although some Poles see the memorials as justified in honouring those who died fighting against Nazi Germany, others seek the removal of Soviet memorials because of the decades of totalitarianism that resulted from Soviet occupation, and also because of the 1939
Nazi-Soviet pact and the
Katyn massacre. Historian
Łukasz Kamiński of the
Institute of National Remembrance said, "Memorials in city centers and villages can send the wrong historical signal... What do you think we got, when the Soviets liberated Poland from Hitler, if not a new yoke?" The removals have attracted criticism from
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who has lashed out at Warsaw officials for opposing the monuments, In April 2015, a formal decommunization process started in
Ukraine after
laws were approved which outlawed
communist symbols, among other things. On 15 May 2015, President
Petro Poroshenko signed a set of laws that started a six-month period for the removal of communist monuments (excluding
World War II monuments) and renaming of public places named after communist-related themes. In 2016, 51,493 streets and 987 cities and villages were renamed, and 1,320
Lenin monuments and 1,069 monuments to other communist figures were removed. ==Results==