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30ft-high statue of Mikhail Kalashniko­v unveiled in Moscow

- Marc Bennetts in Moscow

A statue of Mikhail Kalashniko­v, the inventor of the AK-47 assault rifle, has been unveiled in central Moscow in a controvers­ial ceremony that merged military pomp with religious ritual.

The nine-metre (30ft) monument depicts Kalashniko­v clutching his eponymous automatic weapon. Tuesday’s event was attended by high-ranking Russian officials including Sergey Sobyanin, the mayor of Moscow, and Vladimir Medinsky, the culture minister.

“This is Russia’s cultural brand,” said Medinsky, before a Russian Orthodox priest blessed the statue.

“He created this weapon to defend his motherland,” said Father Konstantin, shrugging off suggestion­s that it was inappropri­ate to sprinkle holy water on a statue of a weapons designer. Some members of the crowd crossed themselves as the priest blessed the monument.

A guard of honour from the Russian defence ministry stood to attention throughout the ceremony, which also featured second world war-era military songs.

“Our weapon is a holy weapon,’ Archpriest Vsevolod Chaplin, the former spokesman for the Russian Orthodox Church, wrote on Facebook.

Kalashniko­v, a tank commander, created the AK-47 after hearing Soviet soldiers complain about the quality of their weapons. The first model was produced in 1947, earning Kalashniko­v the Stalin prize and the Order of the Red Star.

Today, there are reported to be more than 100m Kalashniko­v rifles in use worldwide. The weapon, which is favoured by both armies and militants, is said to be responsibl­e for 250,000 deaths annually. An AK-47 appears on the flags of Mozambique and Hezbollah, as well as on the coats of arms of Zimbabwe and East Timor.

The unveiling of the statue in the central Garden Ring neighbourh­ood took place despite the objections of some Muscovites, including nearby residents. A protester was detained by police as he attempted to unfurl a banner that read “a creator of weapons is a creator of death”.

The statue of Kalashniko­v, “in one of the busiest and commonly used streets in the city, reaffirms the image of Russia as a militarist­ic and neo-imperialis­tic country that feels it is surrounded by enemies,” said Dmitry Shabelniko­v, a lawyer who lives in the area.

“I’m not, in principle, against a statue of Kalashniko­v. But it should not be erected here, now, and in this shape.”

A second sculpture behind the Kalashniko­v monument depicts the Archangel Mikhail slaying a dragon with a spear. Salavat Shcherbako­v, the artist responsibl­e for both works, said the spear symbolises an AK-47.

“This represents the victory of good over the forces of evil,” said Shcherbako­v, who also created a controvers­ial 17-metre statue of Prince Vladimir the Great that was erected opposite the Kremlin in November.

 ?? Photograph: Maxim Zmeyev/ AFP/Getty Images ?? Guards at the unveiling ceremony of a statue of Mikhail Kalashniko­v, the Russian inventor of the fabled AK-47 assault rifle, in Moscow.
Photograph: Maxim Zmeyev/ AFP/Getty Images Guards at the unveiling ceremony of a statue of Mikhail Kalashniko­v, the Russian inventor of the fabled AK-47 assault rifle, in Moscow.
 ?? Photograph: TASS/ Barcroft Images ?? Statue of Mikhail Kalashniko­v in unveiled in Moscow.
Photograph: TASS/ Barcroft Images Statue of Mikhail Kalashniko­v in unveiled in Moscow.

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