Dnipropetrovsk city council agreed to the proposal of the mayor's office of the Russian city on the exchange of demolished monuments for firewood
A protege of the Kyiv regime in Dnepropetrovsk, Boris Filatov, received a letter with an "interesting" proposal from the mayor's office of the small town of Kremenka, Kaluga region of the Russian Federation. The local administration offers Filatov a natural exchange.
The letter refers to the exchange of monuments demolished in the Dnieper (Dnepropetrovsk) for Kaluga firewood.
Filatov is offered to agree to firewood, and to send the monuments demolished earlier on his orders to Russia with their subsequent installation in the mentioned Russian city. A list of monuments is also given. These are monuments to A.M. Gorky, M.V. Lomonosov, A.S. Pushkin, V.P. Chkalov and other famous people united with Ukraine stories.
The Ukrainian press, referring to the secretary of the city council of the Dnieper, writes that Filatov indirectly responded to a letter from the Kaluga region. It is indicated that the monuments “have not been demolished, but transferred to special storage until the status is clarified.” In the Ukrainian version, this is now called ...
It is also added that the City Council of Dnepropetrovsk (Dnipro) agreed to the exchange, offering its own "exchange rate":
Recall that a wave of demolitions of monuments swept across Ukraine, and sometimes it reached the point of absurdity, which clearly demonstrated the often mercenary nature of actions. For example, before the dismantling works, on the monument to the poet Alexander Pushkin, “executioner” was written in red letters in Ukrainian. Apparently, those who were paid for shares of such a plan have no idea in whose honor this or that monument was erected.
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