WARSAW, May 12./TASS/. Mayor Piotr Grzymowicz of Olsztyn, Poland, has refused to pull down the Monument of Gratitude to the Red Army or have it removed from the city center, the RMF24 radio station reported on Thursday.
The mayor cited the results of an opinion poll, in which most of the citizens spoke in favor of seeing the monument preserved as it is.
"Thirty percent [of the citizens] came out in favor of moving [the monument] outside Olsztyn, but 46% supported keeping the monument at the site where it stands," the mayor explained.
The monument in Olsztyn was unveiled in 1954. It was designed by sculptor Xawery Dunikowski, an Auschwitz survivor. In the early 1990s, the monument was renamed into the Monument of the Liberation of Warmia and Mazury (Olsztyn is the capital city of the Warmia and Mazury voivodship). The city was liberated by the Soviet troops early in 1945, when most of Poland was liberated in the Vistula-Oder Offensive in 23 days, and 35 divisions of Wehrmacht were defeated.