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Estonian Police cordoned off the square and nearby streets in early morning of [[April 26]], [[2007]], in preparation for archaeological excavations in search of the remains and, if found, their relocation.<ref>[http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2007/04/26/ap3657302.html Tear Gas Scatters Protesters in Estonia] — [[Associated Press]]</ref>
Estonian Police cordoned off the square and nearby streets in early morning of [[April 26]], [[2007]], in preparation for archaeological excavations in search of the remains and, if found, their relocation.<ref>[http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2007/04/26/ap3657302.html Tear Gas Scatters Protesters in Estonia] — [[Associated Press]]</ref>


A tent structure was erected to shield the excavations from weather, and from public view. Three members of protest organizers "[[Nochnoy Dozor (pressure group)|Night Watch]]" who were monitoring the situation declined to leave the area and locked themselves in their car. Police had to break a side window of the car to extract them forcibly, causing slight shard wounds to one.<ref>[http://www.epl.ee/artikkel/383529 Eesti Päevaleht: Politsei pidi Tõnismäel jõudu kasutama]</ref><ref>[http://www.huliq.com/19787/estonian-authorities-start-removal-of-major-soviet-monument Estonian Authorities Start Removal of Major Soviet Monument]</ref> Having been removed, [[Nochnoy Dozor (pressure group)|Night Watch]] spread rumours that the monument removal procedure had started.{cn} After a few hours, around 1,000 people, mostly Russian-speaking, had surrounded the police cordon and some from the group attempted to break through it.<ref>[http://www.ap3.ee/Default.aspx?link=http://www.ap3.ee/Default2.aspx?ArticleID=460dde0d-0fb7-4e23-8309-3bdaa46380cd Photos of protests] {{et icon}}</ref> Several meetings in protest of the removal were held. Around dusk, the mob turned more and more violent, starting to throw stones and empty bottles at the police.<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hBeKUgFI13s Video of the protests and unrest] {{et icon}}</ref> By around 21:20, the mob activity turned to what police considered the first night's riot.{{cn}}
Planning of the operation was made by the [[Security Cabinet of the Government of Estonia]]. According to Government press representative "topics discussed at the national security council are treated as [[state secret]]"<ref name="secret" />. Although the general intention was public and widely reported by the Estonian and international press, no specific timeline or plans were released in advance. A tent structure was erected to shield the excavations from weather, and from public view. Three members of protest organizers "[[Nochnoy Dozor (pressure group)|Night Watch]]" who were monitoring the situation declined to leave the area and locked themselves in their car. Police had to break a side window of the car to extract them forcibly, causing slight shard wounds to one.<ref>[http://www.epl.ee/artikkel/383529 Eesti Päevaleht: Politsei pidi Tõnismäel jõudu kasutama]</ref><ref>[http://www.huliq.com/19787/estonian-authorities-start-removal-of-major-soviet-monument Estonian Authorities Start Removal of Major Soviet Monument]</ref> Having been removed, [[Nochnoy Dozor (pressure group)|Night Watch]] spread rumours that the monument removal procedure had started.{cn} After a few hours, around 1,000 people, mostly Russian-speaking, had surrounded the police cordon and some from the group attempted to break through it.<ref>[http://www.ap3.ee/Default.aspx?link=http://www.ap3.ee/Default2.aspx?ArticleID=460dde0d-0fb7-4e23-8309-3bdaa46380cd Photos of protests] {{et icon}}</ref> Several meetings in protest of the removal were held. Around dusk, the mob turned more and more violent, starting to throw stones and empty bottles at the police.<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hBeKUgFI13s Video of the protests and unrest] {{et icon}}</ref> By around 21:20, the mob activity turned to what police considered the first night's riot.{{cn}}


In the early morning of [[April 27]], [[2007]], at 3:40 a.m. local time, the Estonian government decided, upon advise from the Estonian Security Council, at an emergency meeting to relocate the monument immediately (as 'the ground for violent acts'). Three hours later by 6:40 a.m. the monument had been moved to an undisclosed provisional location.<ref>[http://www.sloleht.ee/index.aspx?id=226979 Pronkssõdur on Tallinna kesklinnast ära viidud]</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6598269.stm Estonia removes Soviet memorial], BBC, Friday, 27 April 2007, 06:31 GMT 07:31 UK</ref><ref name="epl383641" /><ref>[http://www.delfi.ee/news/paevauudised/eesti/article.php?id=15706791 Delfi: märatsemine mõnitab sõdurivaprust]</ref>
In the early morning of [[April 27]], [[2007]], at 3:40 a.m. local time, the Estonian government decided, upon advise from the Estonian Security Council, at an emergency meeting to relocate the monument immediately (as 'the ground for violent acts'). Three hours later by 6:40 a.m. the monument had been moved to an undisclosed provisional location.<ref>[http://www.sloleht.ee/index.aspx?id=226979 Pronkssõdur on Tallinna kesklinnast ära viidud]</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6598269.stm Estonia removes Soviet memorial], BBC, Friday, 27 April 2007, 06:31 GMT 07:31 UK</ref><ref name="epl383641" /><ref>[http://www.delfi.ee/news/paevauudised/eesti/article.php?id=15706791 Delfi: märatsemine mõnitab sõdurivaprust]</ref>

Revision as of 09:46, 4 May 2007

File:Tallinn Bronze Soldier - May 2006 - 029.jpg
The Bronze Soldier in Tallinn. May, 2006.

The Bronze Soldier (Estonian: Pronkssõdur), originally Monument to the Liberators of Tallinn (Estonian: Tallinna vabastajate monument, Russian: Монумент освободителям Таллина), sometimes called the Tõnismäe Monument, was a Soviet World War II war memorial designed in the socialistic realist style and located in central Tallinn, Estonia. The memorial was erected by the city of Tallinn and unveiled on September 22, 1947, on the third anniversary of Red Army re-entering Tallinn in 1944.

The monument consisted of a mastaba-like stonewall structure of dolomite and a two meter (6.5ft) bronze statue of a soldier in a Soviet uniform. It was located on Tõnismägi (literally: "St. Anthony's hill") above a small mass grave of reburied Soviet soldiers' remains, created in April 1945. The statue had significant symbolic value to Estonia's community of mostly ethnic Russian post-World War II immigrants; not only symbolising Soviet victory over Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War, but also their claim to rights in Estonia.[1] (See Background) For many Estonians, the Bronze Soldier is a symbol of Soviet occupation and repression.

Amid political controversy, in April 2007 the Estonian government started preparations for the relocation of the statue. Although the general intention had been public since the winter, no specific timeline was released in advance.[2] Disagreement over the appropriateness of the action led to mass protests and two nights of the worst rioting Estonia has seen.[3][4] In the early hours of the first night's rioting, the Estonian government decided at an emergency meeting to dismantle the monument immediately. By the afternoon of April 27, 2007 the stone structure had been dismantled. As of the afternoon of April 30 the statue without the mastaba had been placed at the Estonian Defence Forces Military Cemetery in Tallinn[5][6] An opening ceremony for the relocated monument is planned for May 8, VE-Day. (Significantly, Red Army veterans celebrate Victory Day a day later, on May 9.) Reassembling the mastaba and reburial of the remains of the war victims found in the graves under the monument are expected to be completed by end of June.[7]

Building and design

File:Tallinn Bronze Soldier - May 2006 - 030.jpg
After Estonia re-established independence in 1991, a footpath was made across the memorial area, where once an eternal flame had stood.
Construction plan of the monument site from June 12, 1945

The monument, with its figure of a soldier against a stone background, is a typical example of the socialist realistic style and was created in 1947 by the Estonian sculptor Enn Roos and supervising architect Arnold Alas.[8] It was unveiled on September 22, 1947, on the third anniversary of the Soviet Red Army entering Tallinn in 1944. Originally intended as an official war memorial to Soviet soldiers who died fighting in World War II, an eternal flame was added in front of the monument in 1964. The Soviet liberation theme was changed when Estonia re-established independence in 1991, now stating "For those fallen in World War II"; at the same time the eternal flame was put out.

The prototype for the face and figure of the statue has been suggested to have been the olympic gold medal wrestler Kristjan Palusalu, as there is a striking resemblance. The sculptor Enn Roos denied this and instead suggested that he used "a young worker who lived nearby", and there has been claims the worker he is referring to was a carpenter named Albert Johannes Adamson.[9][10][11] Roos' denial could however have been motivated by the fact that Palusalu was a USSR defector.[12]

Mass grave

The exact number and names of the persons buried in the burial grounds under the monument had not been established with certainty before the digs of 2007, although the Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs had ordered a comprehensive historical investigation in 2006.[8] According to official records of the Military Commissariat of the Baltic Military District, the following 13 soldiers who fell during World War II were reburied in the grounds in April 1945:

  • Lieutenant Colonel Mikhail Kulikov (Михаил Петрович Куликов) - commander of the 657th regiment, born in 1909 in Morshansk, Tambov Oblast. Killed on 22 September, 1944.
  • Captain Ivan Sysoyev (Иван Михайлович Сысоев) - political commissar of the 657th regiment, born in 1909 in village Topsa, Arkhangelsk Oblast. Killed on 22 September, 1944.
  • Gefreiter (Senior Private) Dmitri Belov - 125th division (killed in a battle 45 km from Tallinn in September 1944)
  • Colonel Konstantin Kolesnikov (Константин Павлович Колесников) - second commander of 125th division (killed on 21 September, 1944 in a battle 45 km from Tallinn). Born in 1897 in Zhilaya Kosa, Stalingrad Oblast.
  • Captain Ivan Serkov (Иван Степанович Серков) - chief of intelligence, 79th light artillery brigade (killed on 21 September, 1944, in a battle 45 km from Tallinn). Born in 1922, Ryazan Oblast.
  • Major Vasili Kuznetsov (Василий Иванович Кузнецов) - commander of 1222nd artillery regiment. Born in 1908 in Ivanovo Oblast. Killed on 22 September 1944.
  • Lieutenant Vasili Volkov (Василий Егорович Волков) - commander of mortar platoon (125th division). Born in 1923 in Kalinin Oblast. Killed on 22 September 1944.
  • Captain Aleksei Bryantsev (Алексей Матвеевич Брянцев) - 125th division. Born in 1917 in Altai Krai. Killed on 22 September 1944.
  • Sergeant Stepan Hapikalo (Степан Илларионович Хапикало) - tank commander of the 26th tank regiment (according to official military sources died of a disease[citation needed]). Born in 1920 in Poltava Oblast. Died on 28 September 1944.
  • First Sergeant, medic Jelena Varshavskaya (Елена Михайловна Варшавская) - division medical assistant of 40th Guard Mortars regiment (died 22 or 23 September 1944 in Tallinn). Born in 1925 in Poltava Oblast.
  • Sergeant Aleksandr Grigorov - died 7 March 1945
  • Lieutenant Colonel Kotelnikov - no information available
  • Lieutenant I. Lukanov - no information available

On May 2, Estonian Ministry of Defence issued declaration that remains of 12 persons had been exhumed and would be reburied at the same cemetery where the statue of the Bronze Soldier was relocated. Furthermore, the archaeologists performing the digs have confirmed that no more burials have taken place on the grounds of the monument.

Controversy

Background

File:Tallinn Bronze Soldier - Vigil - 25 April 2007 - 009.jpg
A night vigil at the monument by members of the Nochnoy Dozor group on April 25, 2007 one day before its removal.

In 1991, Estonia "confirmed" its independence from the Soviet Union.[13]. At the time over a third of Estonia's population were descendants of Soviet economic migrants, mostly speaking Russian language natively, from post-World War II period. By 1992, the pre-1940 citizenship law was reinstated, conferring automatic citizenship to pre-1940 citizens and their descendants (see jus sanguinis). Post-1940 settlers and their descendants residing in Estonia could apply for citizenship after passing tests in Estonian language and history exam.[14]

In 2006 over 16% of Estonia's residents were without Estonian citizenship. About a third of Estonia's Russians have Russian citizenship, another third are stateless persons, i.e. without any citizenship. While there have been calls for the return of all Estonia's Russians to Russia, the official government policy has been one of integration, expecting that Estonia's residents possess at least a basic command of Estonian language.[14]

Interpretation of historical events lies at the core of several of the most important ethnic controversies in Estonia. Ethnic Estonians regard the period of Soviet Estonia as an illegal occupation, a viewpoint that is the official position of the Estonian Government as well as major world powers such as the USA and EU, but not the Russian Federation. As a consequence, the population that immigrated during the Soviet occupation and their descendants have been labeled by some as illegal occupiers or colonists.[citation needed] However, Russian-speaking population largely views Estonia's annexation into USSR as a legitimate process; an official view of the Russian Federation. They tend to see the monument as a symbol of their purported right to live in Estonia as descendants of the people that liberated the country from fascism.[1]

World War II background

The issue of post-WWII history is also at the core of the ethnic issues in Estonia. Non-Russian ethnic Estonians widely regard the period of Soviet Estonia as an illegal occupation of the Baltic States, a viewpoint that is the official position of the Estonian Government as well as major Western powers such as the United States and Poland. As a consequence, the ethnic Russian and other non-native population that immigrated during the Soviet occupation have been labeled by some as illegal occupiers.[citation needed] However to these Russian immigrants the statue has an important meaning - it is a symbol of their right to live in Estonia as the descendants of the alleged Russian liberators.[1] Estonians generally considered the Nazi German occupation to have been more benign and open towards the Estonian people than later and previous Soviet occupation. Estonians volunteered in the Waffen-SS (see 20th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Estonian)) and other German military organisations to fight against the Red Army on the Narwa Front in order to secure a "free place for Estonians in the New Order in Europe" under German hegemony, or to exhaust the Russians and keep them out for a longer time in the hope that the western Allies would eventually ally with the German Reich against the Soviet Union.

Confrontation

File:Tallinn Bronze Soldier - May 2006 - 046.jpg
The statue in May 2006, cordoned off by police after the confrontation during the celebration of Victory in Europe Day.

Since the restoration of Estonian independence, World War II Soviet Army veterans and representatives of the Russian-speaking population have continued to gather at the monument on certain dates, celebrating May 9 (Victory Day) and September 22 ("Liberation of Tallinn" in 1944). The display of Soviet flags and other symbols at these gatherings has irritated Estonian nationals and the government.[citation needed]

A non-violent confrontation at the monument took place on May 9, 2006, when Estonian nationalists headed by Jüri Liim joined celebrating veterans.[citation needed] On the same month, the tensions rose again and the police kept a 24-hour patrol there, cordoning off the area until early September of that same year.[15] A small group of Estonian Russians set up an organization Nochnoy Dozor (Night Watch), calling for nightly vigils at the monument.[16]

War Graves Protection Act

On January 10, 2007, Riigikogu passed the War Graves Protection Act, with 66 votes in favor and 6 against[17], initiated by the Estonian Reform Party, Social Democratic Party, Res Publica Party and Isamaaliit Party. The preamble of the Act states:

"Respecting and recognizing Estonia’s obligation to ensure the honoring and dignified handling of the remains of the persons killed in the military action on the Estonian territory; noting that the burying of persons killed in the military action in unsuitable places is not in line with European culture and the tradition remembering the deceased and honoring their remains; Considering Article 34 of the Protocol Additional of 8 June 1977 (I) to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949 On the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts, pursuant to which the state of Estonia is obliged to ensure the honoring of the remains of the deceased who died in the military actions on the territory of Estonia and respecting and marking of their grave sites, and pursuant to which the state of Estonia is justified to carry out the reburying of the remains proceeding from public interests, the Riigikogu has passed the present Act." [18]

As the monument and the square are owned by the City of Tallinn, the monument could not legally be removed without their approval without law giving it special status.[19][20] Estonia has mutual war grave protection treaties with Finland and Germany but not with Russia, giving special status to many war graves in Estonia but not the one on Tõnismägi. The War Graves Protection Act's major result was to codify the international customs and practices regarding the handling of war graves (see above) into country-unspecific terms, and to extend unilateral protection to war graves not covered by mutual international protection treaties. Most 20th century battles on Estonian soil having been fought by Soviet (largely ethnically-Russian), German, Estonian armies and a formation of the Finnish volunteers under Estonian command, almost all war graves in Estonia not covered by mutual treaties or earlier domestic laws are those of the Red Army.

Another effect of the law was that it placed all war graves under the jurisdiction of the Estonian Ministry of Defence. Tõnismägi being city land, municipal cooperation would have been necessary for exhumation and/or monument removal without such legislation. As Estonian non-citizens are allowed to vote in municipal elections and are largely in support of retaining the statue, the City Council of Tallinn has a large Russian representation; any approval was unlikely in the foreseeable future. The law eliminated the need to negotiate with the municipal government for war grave related business — specifically, exhumation of the buried bodies and, if the corpses would be found, relocation of the monument which would then be considered a grave marker.

The Act came into force on January 20, 2007.[21]

Proposed Law on Forbidden Structures

On February 15, 2007, Riigikogu approved the Law on Forbidden Structures by 46 votes to 44. This would have banned the public display of monuments that glorify the Soviet Union or Estonia's fifty years of Bolshevism. The monument itself was specifically mentioned, to be dismantled within 30 days of the President signing this into law. However President Toomas Hendrik Ilves exercised his veto and refused to sign the law, arguing that it did not comply with the constitution of Estonia.[22] A veto override was never attempted and this bill did not become law.[23]

Ownership

Mayor Edgar Savisaar of the City of Tallinn has expressed concern that removal of the monument might constitute a breach of city property rights and violate the Constitution of Estonia.[24] As of May 3, no known legal claims to the effect have been made by the City of Tallinn against the Ministry of Defence, or the Government of the Republic of Estonia.

Public perception

The idea of relocation was controversial among inhabitants of Estonia. According to the study of the Eesti Päevaleht in March 2007 only 38% of respondents supported the relocation of the monument, while 44% were against the relocation and 18% had not formed opinion on the subject. Relocation of the monument had slightly stronger support from the native Estonian speakers (47% in favour of the relocation), while only 10% of the native Russian speakers supporting the relocation [25].

According to the opinion poll conducted by daily Estonian newspaper Postimees on 25 April when preparations for relocation already begun, 85.12% of it's readers supported the relocation, 12.98% didn't and the remaining were uncertain.[26].

Events surrounding relocation

Police cordoning off the statue on April 26 2007. The sign says "excavation".

Estonian Police cordoned off the square and nearby streets in early morning of April 26, 2007, in preparation for archaeological excavations in search of the remains and, if found, their relocation.[27]

Planning of the operation was made by the Security Cabinet of the Government of Estonia. According to Government press representative "topics discussed at the national security council are treated as state secret"[2]. Although the general intention was public and widely reported by the Estonian and international press, no specific timeline or plans were released in advance. A tent structure was erected to shield the excavations from weather, and from public view. Three members of protest organizers "Night Watch" who were monitoring the situation declined to leave the area and locked themselves in their car. Police had to break a side window of the car to extract them forcibly, causing slight shard wounds to one.[28][29] Having been removed, Night Watch spread rumours that the monument removal procedure had started.{cn} After a few hours, around 1,000 people, mostly Russian-speaking, had surrounded the police cordon and some from the group attempted to break through it.[30] Several meetings in protest of the removal were held. Around dusk, the mob turned more and more violent, starting to throw stones and empty bottles at the police.[31] By around 21:20, the mob activity turned to what police considered the first night's riot.[citation needed]

In the early morning of April 27, 2007, at 3:40 a.m. local time, the Estonian government decided, upon advise from the Estonian Security Council, at an emergency meeting to relocate the monument immediately (as 'the ground for violent acts'). Three hours later by 6:40 a.m. the monument had been moved to an undisclosed provisional location.[32][33][34][35]

The government stated that the statue would be re-erected as soon as possible in a military cemetery maintained by the Estonian Defence Forces.[36] As of the afternoon of April 30 the statue without the mastaba had been re-erected.[37][6] Reassembling the mastaba has been delayed out of concerns over the æsthetic qualities of the site on reopening, as the mastaba's weight requires a new foundation to be constructed out of concrete, and this can not be done rapidly enough. It is estimated this would be done by the end of June.[citation needed]

An ecumenical religious ceremony (prayer for the dead) was held on April 28 before commencing the exhumation, by a Lutheran and Orthodox chaplain. The Russian ambassador, having been invited to monitor the exhumation, or appoint an observer, officially declined the invitation.[38][39]

As the former site of the monument and of the now-empty mass grave is city property, the government's position is that it is the responsibility of Tallinn Municipal Government to decide what to do next with Tõnismägi hill, former location of the monument, after the exhumation has been completed.[40] No definite plans have been published as of May 3.

Riots and violence

Protests in downtown Tallinn after police cordoned off the streets around the memorial, driving protesters toward the city centre.
Burning kiosk, April 26, 2007.

April 26 - April 27

Estonia's authorities report that the violence started around 21:20 (EEST, UTC+3), as the protesters started to assault the policemen.[34][41] Riot police responded by firing what was reported to be tear gas to disperse the crowd.[42] However, the crowd did not disperse and started committing acts of vandalism and rampant looting[43][44] of nearby shops and buildings. By midnight the riots had spread around the centre of Tallinn, with massive damage to property — a total number of 99 cases of vandalism, including cars that had been turned upside down, broken and looted shop windows, pillaged bars and kiosks.[45][46]

By 2 AM, things had calmed down a little; over 100 people had been arrested.[47] At about half past two (AM), reports came in that mass riots had ended and now the police were only looking for fugitives. The last of the violent protesters were apparently taken away by a large passenger bus.[48] By morning 300 people had been arrested. 57 people were injured, including 14 police officers. Dmitry Ganin (Russian national) died in a hospital from a stabbing wound, inflicted perhaps by another vandal.[49] According to the officials, his death was not the result of police activity[50], and the investigation continues[51]. According to police report, pockets of deceased Dmitri Ganin were full of items stolen from vandalized stores[52].

Tallinn City Council has suspended all strong alcohol retail licenses inside the city borders for a week.[53] There have been concerns, mostly in foreign media, that the protest may escalate into an ethnic conflict between Estonians and members of ethnic Russian minority.[54] Kavkazcenter extremists even speculate that conflicts may spark a Russian armed resistance with support from FSB (the former KGB). [55]

April 27

The night of April 27 saw a recurrence in violence, with a second night of protests. Protesters used Molotov cocktails while police responded with CS gas, rubber bullets and watercannons.[3] Rioting and looting in the towns of North East Estonia (mainly Jõhvi) with a majority of Russian speaking population, were also reported. [3] Estonian sources attributed the disruptions to youths consuming stolen alcohol. In all, some 1,000 people were detained in two nights of rioting. 156 were injured (including some two dozen police officers) and numerous stores, offices and homes were damaged. [56] As there have been too many arrests for the normal pre-trial detention centers, suspects were taken to a holding area near the Terminal D of the Tallinn Seaport[57] [58].

April 28 - April 29

Calm was restored throughout the day and night of April 28 without further major incidents[59], but police launched a campaign to take on "police assistance" volunteers, and by Sunday evening more than 700 persons had signed up and started training.[60]

On April 28 a declaration by a self-named Army of Russian Resistance Kolyvan started circulating in Russian language Internet forums. The declaration called for "all Russian men living in Estonia" to take up arms. It demanded that Estonian citizenship be granted to all Estonian residents by May 3, threatening to start an armed resistance on May 9. [61] At this time, it is not clear whether this group is the one described by the KavkazCenter report (see above) or is a copycat inspired by it.

April 30

No major incidents have been reported, but some vehicle drivers have tried to block the traffic in the center of Tallinn by intentionally driving at a slow speed and excessively using car horn.[62]

The Union of the Peoples of Estonia (Eestimaa Rahvuste Ühendus, an association of minority ethnicities living in Estonia) has published a declaration today,[63] condemning vandalism and maraudery.

A Russian State Duma delegation led by the former FSB Director Nikolay Kovalev has also arrived in Estonia, in what was described as a "fact finding mission".[64] While still in Russia, the chairman of the delegation had already made a declaration, asking Estonia's government (led by Andrus Ansip) to step down.[65] Sven Mikser, leader of the of foreign affairs' commission of the Riigikogu, who was one of the Estonian politicians to meet the Russian delegation, expressed his regret that the Russians had come with prejudices and had intervened in Estonia's internal affairs (e.g. by calling for Estonia's government to resign [66]). Later in the day, the reappearance of the bronze soldier threw the Duma's fact finding mission off course, with delegation leader Kovalev saying that he hadn't been invited by the Estonian authorities to the ceremony at the military cemetery.[67]

There have been some voices that call for cabinet resignation among the Estonian public as well.[68]

May 1

Russian State Duma delegation visited the new location of the statue, placed flowers and a wreath in front of the bronze soldier. The delegation members also closely examined[69] the figure and claimed that it had been cut in pieces and reassembled.[70] The Ministry of Defence denied those claims. "The lines on the statue are because of bronze casting technology and from the time the statue was created," said the press representative of Estonian Ministry of Defence. Those kind of statues are being made in several pieces and later assembled in one.[71]

Estonia's Foreign Minister Urmas Paet said that the European Union has promised to help end a siege at the Estonian embassy in Moscow. Paet had spoken to his German counterpart Frank-Walter Steinmeier who "promised speedy assistance from the European Union to normalise the situation around the Estonian embassy in Moscow." Germany currently holds the rotating presidency of the EU.[72]

The two-day visit by the Russian fact finding delegation was originally set up to defuse a diplomatic dispute over the Bronze Soldier statue, but it only appeared to have escalated the feud. Foreign Minister Urmas Paet issued a statement saying: "I will not meet with a delegation that spreads only lies regarding events in Estonia and whose objective is not the accurate portrayal of the situation, but rather election campaigning".[73]

Claims of police brutality

The secretary of the pro-Russian Estonian Anti-Fascist Committee Andrey Zarenkov claimed that as detention centers are overcrowded many of the detainees were taken to a cargo terminal in Tallinn seaport. "People were forced to squat for hours or lie on the concrete floor with their hands tied behind their backs. The police used plastic handcuffs which caused great pain," he said. "The security men selectively beat the detainees including women and teenagers. We have an account that they beat a 12-year-old girl lying on the floor for attempting to stand up. We have pictures of a toilet which is stained with the blood of the injured detainees," Zarenkov said. He said that all the accounts would be collected, documented and submitted to human rights groups.[74]

The police has denied the claims of the Anti-Fascist Committee. A spokesman for the northern police prefecture, Harrys Puusepp, refuted the charges of ill treatment of the detainees and also said that rumors of the resignation of police officers (see below) are untrue. "Nobody has beaten them. They have been treated politely. All amenities were provided for them and medical assistance was offered. Those who spent more than 12 hours in detention were supplied with meals," he said. [74]

The Estonian Chancellor of Justice has checked on these claims, visited all detention centres, and found no signs of violations of Constitution, nor any detainees who would support claims of police brutality[75] or make complaints [76].

On May 1 Finnish newspaper Iltalehti published an interview with German nationals Klaus and Lucas Dornemanns (65 and 35 years old) [77]. According to their story Dornemanns were just walking in the area of Tallinn Seaport then they were beaten and arrested by the police. The son spent 4 hours in the terminal D while his 60-years old father 10 hours. According to them at least half of the detainees have no relations to vandalism on the Tallinn streets. Still they were denied access to water and toilets, they were even forbidden to move. If anybody attempt to stand up they were beaten by the police[77]. The article provides photograph of the Dornemanns showing large hematomas over their bodies.

Members of the special fact-finding mission of Russian Federation's Duma also visited the WCs of the detention area in temporary detention area in the D terminal of Port of Tallinn, looking for blood stains caused by beatings erroneously reported by some newspapers, and found none.[78]

Zarenkov also claimed that about 350 Russian-speaking police officers want to resign, or have already resigned, from Estonian police force so as not to participate in ostensibly violent actions to stop the unrest, such as mandatory beating of women and children.[79] Such claims have been refuted by Estonian police.[80]

A number of video clips, usually taken via cellphone camera, have appeared on Youtube under the keyword 'eSStonia', ostensibly to corroborate the police brutality claims.[81] Interestingly, most of them are mislabelled, apparently in an attempt to frame the incidents recorded in the clips in a pro-rioter way. For example, the clip labelled "eSStonia - Police car crushes pedestrians crowd" features no pedestrian-menacing cars.[82]

Situation at the Estonian embassy in Moscow

In the days following the relocation, the Estonian embassy in Moscow was besieged by protesters, including pro-Kremlin youth organisations Nashi and the Molodaya Gvardiya.

On Monday, April 30, 2007, Estonia's foreign minister Urmas Paet reported that "the situation had become much worse in the previous night.[83] The building is by now completely blocked."[84] Paet says that Estonia's foreign ministry had sent a note[85] to Russia's foreign ministry, due to Russia's apparent unwillingness and impotency to defend the embassy building and its staff (which violates Diplomatic law, especially the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations). Estonia's foreign ministry claims that the life and health of the diplomats and their family members residing in Moscow have been directly threatened.[86]

Estonia's president Toomas Hendrik Ilves expressed his astonishment that Russia has - despite the promises of foreign minister Lavrov - not taken actions to protect the diplomatic personnel. In Ilves' opinion, the ostensible powerlessness of Russia's defense services (e.g. Omon) is especially surprising, given their quick work when dispersing meetings of Russian opposition forces.[87]

On the same day, members of the crowd protesting before the embassy declared that if Estonian authorities would not set a date for the restoration of the Bronze Soldier statue in its former prominent place, they would begin demolishing the Estonian embassy building on May 1st (traditionally also Labour Day, important in Russia and the former Soviet Union). The building itself was covered with graffiti and stones were thrown at it.

During the night, protestors, both from pro-Putin and Communist parties, were playing and singing aloud famous Soviet war marches of the Red Army.[88] They called the Estonians Fascists.[citation needed]

On May 2 the protestors attacked the Estonian ambassador Marina Kaljurand, despite diplomatic immunity. The vehicle of the Swedish ambassador was also attacked. [89] Family members of the embassy staff have been evacuated[90]. During the night of May 2 - May 3, Estonian embassy in Moscow was stoned by unknown vandals; there were also protests around the embassy of Georgia (Georgia has expressed support for Estonia) [91].

Threatened and alleged sanctions

On May 2, Estonian foreign minister Urmas Paet made a proposal to the European Union to bring down sanctions against Russia and to postpone the Russia-EU summit which is scheduled for mid-May.[92]

On May 3, 2007 Russia suddenly announced plans for repairs to railway lines to Estonia, disrupting oil and coal exports to Estonia. As a result, oil companies scurried to secure alternative export routes. Normally Estonia's ports handle about a quarter of such shipments from Russia to world markets. Although Russia denied it was imposing economic sanctions or taking politically inspired action against Estonia, it is suspected that the sudden railway repair plan is connected to the row over the war memorial[93].

Russian Health Inspection stopped allowing Estonian meat products to Russia on 4th May, claiming that the meat products were not corresponding to standards[94].The Russian transport firm Severstaltrans says it is suspending construction of an $80m (£40m) car plant in Estonia.[95]

Pro-rioter propaganda

During the events, a number of propaganda efforts were undertaken by various people and groups of people that served to muddy the issue, confuse the state of the monument, and inflame the pro-monument (mostly Russian-speaking) population[citation needed]. Even before the first riot, rumours were circulated that under cover of the tent, the monument had been demolished and the war victims buried underneath thrown out as trash.[96] These rumours were supported with a fake photo depicting the statue sawed off above feet.[citation needed] Picked up by Russian media, the rumors were sometimes falsely attributed as public statements of "Estonian government press service".[97]

After the first night of rioting, the direction of the propaganda changed towards attempts to justify the rioting, declaring the rioters to be peaceful demonstrators and the arrested suspected vandals political prisoners, and making various accusations towards the government of Estonia.

Leader of the Constitutional party Andrei Zarenkov claimed on Friday morning that the bones had already been dug up and thrown away and the statue cut to pieces and scraped. He was sure, it was never going to be restored [25]. A day later the same man claimed that more than 350 ethnic Russian police officers have already or will be resigning shortly in protest to having to discipline rioters. His claims were soon said to be an outright lie by police officials[25].

According to Estonian Minister of Justice, Rein Lang, several websites of Estonian government agencies had been attacked from a number of sources, and some of the IP-addresses come from the state authorities of Russian Federation [92].

Pro-rioter propaganda in Russia

Russian news sources have reported various rumours mentioned above as facts. This has caused confusion of the situation among people served by Russian-language media, and may have influenced the severity of the situation at the Estonian embassy in Moscow.

Distinctly, many participants in the blockade believe that what were characterised as "riots" by Estonian official sources were actually a peaceful political demonstration and that Dmitri (or Dmitry) Ganin, the man that died in the riots died through police brutality while attempting to defend the monument.[98][99][100] He has been declared a "hero of Russia" by activists involved in the blockade.[101][citation needed]

These views were also reflected by the special fact-finding mission of Russian Duma members who, upon arrival, declared Linter, who is arrested under suspicion of causing riots, a political prisoner and demanded to visit him.[citation needed]

Law enforcement response

The police are treating the riots as disorderly conduct (a misdemeanor under Estonian law) or group disorderly conduct (a felony under Estonian law), depending on the circumstances of any particular incident, and are proceeding accordingly. About 1,000 suspected rioters were arrested. Acts of vandalism and looting are treated separately, and processed as criminal incidents separate from the rioting.

Three men have been detained under a court order for up to 6 months, pending investigation of the suspicion of organising riots (a felony under Estonian law punishable of imprisonment of up to 5 years).[102][103]

Since the riots took place in the centre of the city, after hours of tension, many thousands of frames of photographic and video material of the events are available, both from journalists and security cameras and from witnesses among general public (who usually used cellphone cameras). The police have gathered a number of such photographs depicting unidentified suspects on a website at [5] (not available from outside Estonia while a foreign DDoS attack on Estonian government servers is underway[104][105]) and asked the public to identify such unidentified people.

The police have also called for rioters and looters to turn themselves in voluntarily.[106] Aiding law enforcement in investigating one's own unlawful acts, including turning oneself in before an arrest warrant has been issued, is considered a meritorious deed and grounds for lessening punishment under Estonian law.

Political reaction

 Estonia — President Toomas Hendrik Ilves appealed for calm and denounced the rioters as "criminals" due to the damage they had caused:

"All this had nothing to do with the inviolability of graves or keeping alive the memory of men fallen in World War II"… "The common denominator of last night’s criminals was not their nationality, but their desire to riot, vandalize and plunder".[107]

 Estonia — Prime Minister Andrus Ansip said in a televised address, in Estonian and Russian, that he was forced to remove the statue after the first riots on Thursday night. He said the statue was under police guard and was safe. It and any remains would be moved to a military cemetery.

"We must not let the sowers of hatred become the ones to split the nation or to plant prejudice," he said. "All nationalities were respected" ... "but violence was not". The memory of dead soldiers was not served when "a picture of a drunk shoplifter is being shown all over the world." [108]

 Russia — The Federation Council, on April 27, approved a statement concerning the monument, which urges the Russian authorities to take the "toughest possible measures" against Estonia:

The dismantling of the monument on the eve of Victory Day on May 9 is "just one aspect of the policy, disastrous for Estonians, being conducted by provincial zealots of Nazism,"… "These admirers of Nazism forget that politicians come and go, while the peoples in neighboring countries are neighbors for eternity. The dismantling of the monument and the mockery of the remains of the fallen soldiers is just more evidence of the vengeful policy toward Russians living in Estonia and toward Russia".[109]

 Russia — First Deputy Prime Minister Sergey Ivanov said that adequate measures, primarily, economic ones, should be taken against Estonia:

"In particular, Russia must speed up the construction of modern ports on Russian territory on the Baltic Sea, in the towns of Ust-Luga, Primorsk and Vysotsk. Thereby, we will handle our own cargo flow and not allow other countries, including Estonia, to benefit from its transit. I have already ordered and instructed the Minister of Transport accordingly."[110]

 European Union — Although the EU has not issued an official statement, foreign policy chief Javier Solana has voiced support for Estonia and denounced violence in the wake of a night of unrest in Tallinn:

"Solana phoned President Toomas Hendrik Ilves today and said the EU understands and supports Estonia", the president's adviser Toomas Sildam said.[111]

 European Union — At 2nd May, EU demanded Russia to implement the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations and secure proper protection for the Estonian embassy in Moscow. EuroCommission spokesperson Christiana Homan said:

We share the concern about the growing tension around Estonia’s embassy, and demand that Russian authorities implement their obligations within the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations,[112]

NATO - NATO statement on Estonia:

NATO is deeply concerned by threats to the physical safety of Estonian diplomatic staff, including the Ambassador, in Moscow, as well as intimidation at the Estonian Embassy. These actions are unacceptable, and must be stopped immediately; tensions over the Soviet war memorial and graves in Estonia must be resolved diplomatically between the two countries. NATO urges the Russian authorities to implement their obligations under the Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations. [113]

UN — UN chief Ban Ki-moon has called on Russia and Estonia to resolve their dispute over the removal of a Soviet war memorial from the Estonian capital:

The Secretary-General regrets the violence and the loss of life in Tallinn, Estonia. He appeals to all concerned to deal with the issues at hand in a spirit of respect and conciliation.[114]

 Latvia — The Latvian Ministry of Foreign Affairs "strongly condemns acts of vandalism in Tallinn which took place over night between 26 and 27 April" according to their press release:

"In a democratic country, any group of society which disagrees with government decisions is free to express its own opinion, however, it must not violate the law. Acts of vandalism which pose a threat to the life and health of people and damage and destroy property have nothing in common with the democratic forms of protest."[115]

 Lithuania — President of the Republic of Lithuania Valdas Adamkus announced that Lithuania is concerned and watching over the events in Tallinn and that it fully supports the positions of the Estonian government.

"There is no doubt that respect should be shown to the memory of the fallen soldiers. However, the Soviet Army didn't bring freedom to the Baltic states, so can we blame Estonia if the Soviet soldiers' remains from a central Tallinn square are reinterred in another cemetery? [116] "

 FinlandPrime Minister Matti Vanhanen noted that the "...demonstrations and riots are of course an interior matter of Estonia," in an interview given to television:

"Finland nor other countries do not have to get involved. As they are occurring in an area near Finland, then we will of course keep a very close eye on them."[117]

"It is not part of international etiquette for politicians to request the resignation of a foreign government's ministry, it just doesn't suit"[118]

 Poland — The Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement, hoping that clashes in Estonia would calm down. The ministry also called on the European Union to show support for Estonia, saying:

"[Estonia] should not be left to stand alone" ... "Yet again the difficult history is casting a shadow on relations between states and nations and ethnic groups".[119]

 Poland — President Lech Kaczynski held a two telephone conversations with Estonian President Toomas Ilves, during which he expressed support for actions made by Estonian authorities and declared Poland will make appropriate actions within European Union to support Estonia. Among other topics, conversation also involved the situation of Estonian Embassy in Moscow.[120].

 Poland - The Polish Minister of Culture Kazimierz Ujazdowski has confirmed on 30th of April that symbols of the communist dictatorship will be removed from the streets all over the country. He said that, on May 15, a new law will go into effect that will make it easier for local authorities to remove both Soviet memorials and Polish communist symbols[121].

 Germany — Although Germany has not issued an official statement, Finnish newspaper Helsingin Sanomat reported that German Chancellor Angela Merkel phoned both Andrus Ansip and Vladimir Putin and asked that the parliaments of the two countries start discussions over the conflict.[122]

 Ukraine — The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine announced that the incident in Tallinn is a completely internal affair of Estonia, without any further comments.[123]

 Sweden — Minister of Foreign Affairs Carl Bildt said that what is happening in Estonia is an internal matter and that the outcome forms an intricate part of Estonia's independence. He has faith in the Estonians to sort it out and believes it to be important that they do so themselves, without international interference. [124] [125] [126] [127] Carl Bildt also pointed out that he "understands why the popular reaction about the statue has been so sharp":

"If somebody had erected a statue of King Christian the Tyrant in Stockholm 500 years after [the Stockholm Bloodbath of 1520], it would also have been a subject of controversy.[128]

 NorwayForeign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre announced that both sides should stop the violence and start respecting each other.[129]

 Kyrgyzstan — On April 27 the Kyrgyz Parliament condemned the dismantling of the monument, calling it "an act against history." [130]

 United States - on May 2, USA's State Department released a press statement, stating that "[d]ecisions on placement of the memorial to soldiers who died fighting the Nazis in World War II belong to the Estonian government" and expressing concern about continuing reports of violence and harassment, including harassment of Estonian diplomatic personnel and premises in Moscow.[131]

Other reaction

Gerhard Schröder, former German Chancellor (socialist, SPD) and current chairman of a shareholders' committee of a gas consortium controlled by the Russian Gazprom, alleged that the removal was insulting to Russians who died fighting Nazi Germany:

"The way Estonia is dealing with the memory of young Russian soldiers who lost their lives in the fight against fascism is in bad taste and irreverent"[132][133]

File:Flag of Tajikistan (bordered).svg The Tajik Council of War Veterans condemned the removal of the statue, stating, "Estonian bureaucrats are behaving like fascists."[134]

Katyn Committee (relatives of Polish officers, who were executed on the orders of the Soviet authorities in the village of Katyn) in Poland, said:

"[Estonia] suffered from the Soviet occupation, while Soviet monuments have always been the symbol of slavery and lies, as well as Russian chauvinism. The Katyn Committee expresses solidarity with the sovereign government of Estonia and approves its decision to remove the Soviet monuments, sites of the 'Red' empire. We are indignant at Russian official statements threatening to cut off diplomatic ties with Estonia."[135][136]

On April 28 three large Russian supermarket networks: Seventh Continent, Kopeika and Samokhval banned all Estonian commodities.[137]

The Mayor of Tallinn and the oppositional Centre Party chairman Edgar Savisaar condemned the disproportional use of force by the police stating that there is no explanation why several policemen should apply physical force against a handcuffed detainee[138]. He also stated that the central government should compensate the city of Tallinn the losses caused by the unrest over the relocation of the monument. According the Savisaar the direct losses exceed 40..50 million Estonian kroons (2.5 - 3 million EUR)[139] As a reaction to his statement (disapproved of by many leading Estonian politicians), the Estonian National Movement started to collect signatures on Internet for Mayor Savisaar's resignation.[140]

On May 1 Moscow Mayor Yury Luzhkov has proposed to boycott everything related to Estonia for "actions taken against the Bronze Soldier Monument and graves of our soldiers". He said that Russian companies should cut their relations with partners in Estonia. "One should tell our business: stop contacts with Estonia. The country showed its negative, and I would say fascist face," the mayor said, adding: "No one will be able to re-write the history." [141]

International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights:

"According to media reports as well as reports received by the IHF, police in some cases used disproportionate force against riot participants. Some protesters were reportedly hit with batons, beaten and mistreated after being taken into custody in a temporary detention facility established in a terminal at the Tallinn port. Some cases of apparent police brutality were documented by TV broadcasts and cell phone recordings.

The riots in Tallinn and other Estonian cities have served to highlight remaining problems relating to the integration of the country’s Russian-speaking minority, which constitutes about one third of the 1.4 million residents. Despite a number of important legislative reforms since the first years of independence, this minority is still not officially recognized as a linguistic minority and continues to face discrimination and exclusion in everyday life, thus fostering frustration and resentment among its members. Many Russian-speakers still lack Estonian citizenship, Russian-language education has gradually been reduced and stringent language requirements restrict access to the labor market for Russian-speakers. "[142]

See also

References

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  2. ^ a b Pronksmehe äraviimise ajakava jäi saladuseks
  3. ^ a b c Fresh clashes over Estonia statue BBC Cite error: The named reference "BBC28" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  4. ^ Olukord tänavatel on rahulik Template:Et icon
  5. ^ Picture of statue in new place
  6. ^ a b Pronkssõdur avati rahvale vaatamiseks
  7. ^ Pronkssõdur on uues kohas!
  8. ^ a b Tallinnas Tõnismäel asuv punaarmeelaste ühishaud ja mälestusmärk
  9. ^ http://www.epl.ee/?artikkel=274240
  10. ^ http://www.sirvilauad.ee/files/kaasik.pdf
  11. ^ Kes on see mees, kes seisab Tõnismäel? Eesti Päevaleht, September 16, 2004. Retrieved: 2007-04-28
  12. ^ "Brottaren bakom bronssoldaten". Dagens Nyheter. 2007-05-02. Retrieved 2007-05-03.
  13. ^ Text of the decision - Eesti Vabariigi Ülemnõukogu otsus Eesti Riiklikust iseseisvusest - http://www.postimees.ee/080906/esileht/olulised_teemad/15_aastat/213898.php
  14. ^ a b General elections in Estonia, 4th March 2007
  15. ^ May 9 protesters call for removing Bronze Soldier statue
  16. ^ Petition of the "night patrol" - by Nochnoy Dozor
  17. ^ http://www.riigikogu.ee/?id=41996&parent_id=41993&op=printit&langchange=1
  18. ^ http://www.riigiteataja.ee/ert/act.jsp?id=12777064
  19. ^ Estonia Govt Fighting Bronze Soldier
  20. ^ Ansip ei välista pronkssõduri saatuse otsustamist riigikogus
  21. ^ Elektrooniline Riigi Teataja: Sõjahaudade kaitse seadus
  22. ^ http://www.epl.ee/laupaev/374457
  23. ^ This can be checked by searching for "Keelatud rajatiste seadus" in the official repository of Estonian laws, [1]. As a negative, there do not appear to be positive newspaper articles reporting it.
  24. ^ Postimees: Savisaar: otsust Tõnismäe monumendi teisaldamiseks ei ole Template:Et icon
  25. ^ a b c Eestlased teisaldaks pronkssõduri, venelased mitte Postimees 12 March 2007 Cite error: The named reference "polling" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  26. ^ http://www.postimees.ee/online/gallup_arhiiv.php
  27. ^ Tear Gas Scatters Protesters in EstoniaAssociated Press
  28. ^ Eesti Päevaleht: Politsei pidi Tõnismäel jõudu kasutama
  29. ^ Estonian Authorities Start Removal of Major Soviet Monument
  30. ^ Photos of protests Template:Et icon
  31. ^ Video of the protests and unrest Template:Et icon
  32. ^ Pronkssõdur on Tallinna kesklinnast ära viidud
  33. ^ Estonia removes Soviet memorial, BBC, Friday, 27 April 2007, 06:31 GMT 07:31 UK
  34. ^ a b Pronkssõdur viidi minema Template:Et icon
  35. ^ Delfi: märatsemine mõnitab sõdurivaprust
  36. ^ Government Communication Office Briefing Room - The war grave in central Tallinn
  37. ^ Picture of statue in new place
  38. ^ AFP: Estonia to re-house Soviet war statue by May 8th
  39. ^ Ireland.com: Estonia to relocate Red Army statue
  40. ^ Government Briefing Room - April 26 Press Meeting Transcript
  41. ^ http://tuvasta.politsei.ee/0426_01.html — photos of protests and riots. The site asks people to identify any participants in riots and the looting that ensued.
  42. ^ Estonia seals off Soviet memorialBBC
  43. ^ Photos of vandalised Pärnu road Template:Et icon
  44. ^ Photos of looting of a kiosk Template:Et icon
  45. ^ Video from the site Template:Et icon
  46. ^ another video (mpg) from the site Template:Et icon
  47. ^ Pihl: arreteeritud on üle 100 inimese Template:Et icon
  48. ^ Politsei viib meeleavaldajaid bussidega minema Template:Et icon
  49. ^ Öine märul: üks surnu, 44 vigastatut, 99 lõhkumisjuhtu ja 300 kinnipeetut Template:Et icon
  50. ^ Interfax: police not to blame for death
  51. ^ Mäss Tallinnas nõudis inimohvri, 44 vigastatut Template:Et icon
  52. ^ Rahutustes pussitatud Dmitri rüüstas poode
  53. ^ Tallinna linnavalitsus keelas rahutuste tõttu alkoholi müügi Template:Et icon
  54. ^ Tallinnan kiistelty patsas siirretty — mellakoissa yksi kuolonuhri ja kymmeniä loukkaantuneitaYLE Template:Fi icon
  55. ^ FSB has created armed terrorist group in Estonia
  56. ^ More than 200 detained in Estonia Itar TASS, April 29, 2007. Retrieved: 2007-04-29
  57. ^ Maxim Kiselev Excesses of Estonian Special Police Vesti 28 April 2007 Template:Ru icon
  58. ^ Aktuaalne kaamera (vene keeles) ETV24 28 April 2007 Template:Ru icon
  59. ^ Reuters: Estonia calm after Red Army site riots
  60. ^ More than 200 detained in Estonia Itar TASS, April 29, 2007. Retrieved: 2007-04-29
  61. ^ Заявление отряда Армии Русского Сопротивления "Колывань" (Эстония)
  62. ^ http://www.postimees.ee/300407/esileht/siseuudised/tallinn/258007.php
  63. ^ http://www.epl.ee/artikkel/384005 Template:Et icon
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  66. ^ http://rus.postimees.ee/300407/glavnaja/estonija/15586.php
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  68. ^ e.g. Juhan Kivirähk
  69. ^ [2]
  70. ^ Riigiduuma esindajate hinnangul on pronkssõdurit tükkideks lõigatud
  71. ^ Kaitseministeerium: pronkssõdurit pole tükeldatud ega vigastatud
  72. ^ EU promises to help end siege at Estonian mission in Moscow AFP, May 1, 2007. Retrieved: 2007-05-01
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  74. ^ a b Interfax: Ethnic Russians quit Estonian police to stay away from violence
  75. ^ http://www.postimees.ee/250207/tartu_postimees/246794.php
  76. ^ EPL: Jõks: mulle pole esitatud ühtegi kaebust
  77. ^ a b Saksalainen isä ja poika kertovat kauhun hetkistään Tallinnan poliisin huostassa (Germans, father and son Dornemanns talk about their nightmare in Tallinn Police) Iltalehti May 1 2005 Template:Fi icon
  78. ^ Postimees: Riigiduuma esindajate hinnangul on pronkssõdurit tükkideks lõigatud
  79. ^ Interfax: Русскоязычные полицейские подают заявления об уходе, не желая участвовать в насилии - Антифашистский комитет
  80. ^ Postimees: Politsei: jutt lahkuvatest venelastest politseinikest on vale
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  84. ^ http://www.postimees.ee/300407/esileht/siseuudised/258003.php Template:Et icon
  85. ^ http://www.postimees.ee/300407/esileht/siseuudised/258005.php Template:Et icon, also reported by Russian media: http://rian.ru/world/relations/20070430/64681928.html Template:Ru icon
  86. ^ http://www.epl.ee/artikkel/384003 Template:Et icon
  87. ^ As images show, the protesters have entered into embassy territory. E.g. here 'фашистская зона' - 'fascist zone' has been scribbled on embassy wall.
  88. ^ http://wiadomosci.gazeta.pl/wiadomosci/1,53600,4101086.html
  89. ^ [http://www.iltalehti.fi/uutiset/200705026057323_uu.shtml Iltalehti - Ruotsin suurlähettilästä vastaan hyökättiin Moskovassa]
  90. ^ http://www.postimees.ee/020507/esileht/siseuudised/258306.php Template:Et icon / http://rus.postimees.ee/020507/glavnaja/estonija/15699.php Template:Ru icon
  91. ^ http://www.epl.ee/artikkel/384405 Template:Et icon; http://rus.postimees.ee/030507/glavnaja/za_rubezhom/15740.php Template:Ru icon
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  93. ^ S. WAGSTYL, "Russia rail move to hit Estonia supply line" in the Financial Times, May 3, 2007, p. 3.
  94. ^ [3] Lihatööstus: Vene veterinaaramet peatas Eesti liha müügi ?
  95. ^ BBC NEWS, Estonian embassy blockade to end, May 3, 2007, [4]
  96. ^ Postimees: Venelased süüdistavad valitsust vandalismis
  97. ^ RIA Novosti: Estonian government cuts up WWII memorial
  98. ^ ITAR-TASS: Estonia (sic) metropolitan denounces violence in Tallinn
  99. ^ ITAR-TASS: Meetings and rallies banned in Estonia
  100. ^ EPL: Rahutustes pussitatud Dmitri rüüstas poode
  101. ^ Estonia blames Russian media for lies
  102. ^ Postimees: Kohus võttis Öise Vahtkonna liidri vahi alla
  103. ^ Postimees: Märuli organiseerimises kahtlustatav vahistati teel kodanikuõpetuse eksamile
  104. ^ Government Communication Office Briefing Room: Malicious cyber attacks against Estonia come from abroad
  105. ^ F-Secure Web log: Large attacks against websites run by the Estonian government
  106. ^ Postimees: Politsei kutsub märatsenud noori end ise üles andma
  107. ^ Estonia Removes Soviet War Memorial by Jari Tanner, in the Washington Post, April 27, 2007. Retrieved: 2007-04-27
  108. ^ Estonia calm after Red Army site riots, Russia angry Reuters, April 28, 2007. Retrieved: 2007-04-28
  109. ^ Россия категорически не приемлет варварское отношение эстонских властей к памяти тех, кто спас Европу от фашизма - заявление сенаторов Interfax, April 27, 2007. Retrieved: 2007-04-27
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  112. ^ Estonia Makes European Alliance against Russia
  113. ^ http://www.nato.int/docu/pr/2007/p07-044e.html
  114. ^ SECRETARY-GENERAL REGRETS VIOLENCE, LOSS OF LIFE IN ESTONIA
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  124. ^ http://www.regeringen.se/sb/d/8983/a/81345;jsessionid=apWXrf06CoYh
  125. ^ http://carlbildt.wordpress.com/2007/04/28/tallinn/
  126. ^ http://www.postimees.ee/290407/esileht/valisuudised/257849.php
  127. ^ http://http://www.dn.se/DNet/jsp/polopoly.jsp?d=148&a=644699
  128. ^ Bildt talade med presidenten, by Clas Svahn, in the Dagens Nyheter, April 29, 2007. Retrieved: 2007-04-30
  129. ^ - Én død og 44 skadet i opptøyer i Tallinn. Aftenposten, April 27, 2007. Retrieved: 2007-04-27
  130. ^ http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=11478851&PageNum=0
  131. ^ US Department of State press statement, May 2, 2007
  132. ^ dpa (2007-04-27). "German ex-chancellor condemns Estonia war memorial removal". Monsters and Critics.com. Retrieved 2007-05-01.
  133. ^ As a reaction, Andrus Ansip cancelled the scheduled meeting (May 8) with Gerhard Schröder. - http://www.epl.ee/uudised/384052
  134. ^ "Russia's upper house calls for cutting ties with Estonia". rian.ru. 2007-04-27. Retrieved 2007-04-30. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help) Template:Ru icon
  135. ^ http://en.rian.ru/world/20070428/64633570.html
  136. ^ http://www.postimees.ee/290407/esileht/valisuudised/257827.php
  137. ^ "Three large supermarket networks boycott Estonian commodities". Lenta.ru. 2007-04-28. Retrieved 2007-04-29. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) Template:Ru icon
  138. ^ Savisaar will complain about the police actions DELFI 29 April 2007
  139. ^ Savisaar sent Ansip demand for compensations DELFI 27 апреля 2007
  140. ^ Savisaare tagasiastumise poolt on allkirja andnud tuhandeid inimesi
  141. ^ http://www.interfax.ru/e/B/politics/28.html?id_issue=11725038
  142. ^ http://www.ihf-hr.org/viewbinary/viewhtml.php?doc_id=7532

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Opponents of the relocation

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Neutral views

Riots

59°25′52″N 24°44′24″E / 59.43111°N 24.74000°E / 59.43111; 24.74000