![A monument to Soviet military leader Mykola Shchors has been dismantled in Kyiv. (AP PHOTO) A monument to Soviet military leader Mykola Shchors has been dismantled in Kyiv. (AP PHOTO)](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/silverstone-feed-data/58494f87-8171-45ac-8e0a-7ab2c877f2e3.jpg/r0_0_800_600_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Ukrainian officials are pressing on with a campaign to remove Soviet-era monuments as authorities in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv dismantled a statue of a Red Army commander from a central boulevard.
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Ukraine has doubled down on efforts to erase all traces of Russian rule amid a full-scale invasion by Kremlin troops, now nearing its two-year mark.
Municipal workers on Saturday carefully hoisted the hulking statue of Mykola Shchors, a Soviet field commander during the Russian Civil War, off its pedestal.
The structure had occupied a prominent spot on a central artery named after Ukraine's national poet.
Onlookers stopped to watch and photograph as a giant crane lowered the horse-riding Shchors onto a flatbed truck.
"We need to educate our youth so that they know our history," said Zoya Kobyliukova, 82, who described communism as a "utopia" that led to many people being killed.
"They're doing the right thing to be taking him down."
Kyiv city councillor Leonid Yemets told Reuters the statue would be moved to a museum.
Authorities in Ukraine's Black Sea port of Odesa dismantled a prominent statue of Catherine the Great last year after a months-long campaign by activists.
Thousands of Ukrainian streets and settlements have also been renamed in recent years as part of a de-communisation campaign launched after the 2014 Maidan Revolution, which toppled a pro-Russian leader.
Australian Associated Press