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Lukashenko slams campaigners for removal of monuments to Soviet soldiers as freaks

Belarussian President paid particular attention to Poland, where "some people find monuments annoying"

MINSK, December 14. /TASS/. Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko has slammed as "freaks" those who demolish monuments to the Soviet soldiers who saved the world from fascism.

"There are many freaks in Poland and in Ukraine. I have no other name for those who ruin monuments," Lukashenko said at a meeting with Russian journalists on Friday.

Lukashenko paid particular attention to Poland.

"Six hundred thousand Soviet soldiers lost their lives liberating Poland. And now some people there find monuments annoying," he said angrily. "When I see them armed with pneumatic hammers tearing off the head of a statue of some military commander, I cannot but say this is sheer idiocy. Those who wage a war on monuments are freaks," Lukashenko said.

Poland on October 21, 2017 enacted an updated law on decommunization, which envisages the demolition of monuments and memorials commemorating "individuals, organizations, events or dates symbolizing Communism or other totalitarian system.".