1. Fallen symbols: Five Other Removed Statues BBC News April 10, 2015
1. A monument to British colonialist Cecil Rhodes at the University of Cape Town in South Africa has been taken down
after students protested saying it was a symbol of historical white oppression. The BBC takes a look at other statues in
recent history that have been removed for what they symbolized.
2. In 2003, when US tanks rolled into Baghdad and ousted the government of Saddam Hussein from power there were
celebrations in the main square. Iraqi men tried to pull down a huge statue of Saddam Hussein but were unable to. US
troops then joined in and used an armored vehicle to dismantle it. The scene was watched live on television by millions of
people around the world.
3. In 2011, Libyan rebels took ColMuammar Gaddafi's Bab al-Aziziya compound in Tripoli, one of the final areas that
remained in his control after an uprising. Footage on local television showed fighters breaking off the head of a statue of
the leader and kicking it along the ground.
2. 4. In December 2013, anti-government protests erupted in the streets of the Ukrainian capital Kiev, after the government
refused a deal on closer ties with the European Union. Protesters,who opposed a customs union with Russia, toppled a
statue of Russian revolutionary leader Vladimir Lenin and smashed it with hammers. It sparked the destruction of Lenin
statues in various other Ukrainian cities.
5. The statue of Felix Dzerzhinsky, the founder of the first Soviet secret police force,the Cheka,was removed from
Moscow's Lubyanka Square in 1991. It came after the collapse of a coup against the then Soviet leader, Mikhail
Gorbachev. The Cheka was one of the former names of the KGB. Throughout the Communist era it was responsible for
abducting, torturing and killing many thousands of people.
6. In 2013, a bronze statue of French footballer Zinedine Zidane's infamous 2006 World Cup final head butt was taken
down from the Corniche in Doha, Qatar. The sculpture, by an Algerian-born French artist, had only been installed a few
weeks earlier, but prompted outrage from Muslim conservatives who believed it encouraged idolatry. Others thought it
promoted violence or was in bad taste. It portrays Zidane headbutting Italy's Marco Materazzi.