http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/stalin-billboards-for-victory-day/400091.html
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Stalin Billboards for Victory Day 
18 February 2010
By Natalya Krainova
City Hall plans to set up billboards in central Moscow to explain dictator 
Josef Stalin's role in the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany, an idea that has 
drawn criticism from a senior state official and rights activists alike.

 The billboards will be erected on the request of "numerous veterans 
organizations" in time for Victory Day on May 9 as part of the celebrations of 
the 65th anniversary of defeat of Germany in World War II, Moscow Advertising 
Committee head Vladimir Makarov said in an e-mailed statement Thursday.

Makarov, who is currently under investigation for purportedly giving illegal 
advertising discounts, was released from pretrial detention this week.

 The Stalin billboards will be placed at traditional meeting places of veterans 
on Poklonnaya Gora, Manezh Square, Gogolevsky Bulvar, Sokolniki Park, Vorobyovy 
Gory and several other places, Makarov said.

The content of the billboards will be sent for approval either to the Defense 
Ministry's Institute of Military History or to the Central Museum of the Great 
Patriotic War in Moscow, Makarov said. 

Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, State Duma Speaker Boris Gryzlov, 
Yabloko leader Sergei Mitrokhin and several human rights activists decried the 
move Thursday.

 "Stalin made many mistakes, especially ahead of the war and at the start of 
it," Gorbachev said, Interfax reported. He speculated that for many the 
informational billboards would "elicit misunderstanding and surprise."

 Prominent human rights activists Lev Ponomaryov and Lyudmila Alexeyeva 
promised to organize demonstrations to protest the Stalin billboards, 
RIA-Novosti reported.

 "Stalin is a criminal, and it is a shame to advertise his regime that killed 
millions of people," Alexeyeva told RIA-Novosti.

 Gryzlov called the move "wrong," saying that "posters can't change the dubious 
role of Stalin in the life of our country," Interfax reported.

Mitrokhin said in a statement that "numerous documents and facts" discovered 
after the war provide "indisputable proof that the victory was achieved not 
thanks to, but rather despite, Stalin and Stalin's system."

Rights activists have criticized the government for what they see as a broad 
attempt to rehabilitate Stalin in the public's mind while playing down or 
justifying the violence and terror of his regime against Soviet citizens.

 In August, city authorities reopened a vestibule at the Kurskaya metro station 
that had been refurbished with an inscription of a verse from the 1944 version 
of the Soviet national anthem that praised Stalin. Proponents argued that the 
verse merely restored historical accuracy to the station, while critics called 
it a disturbing lionization of the dictator.


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