The Little Mermaid statue in Copenhagen, one of Denmark’s most notable landmarks, has been vandalised with a Russian flag painted across its base.
The colours of the red, white and blue ensign were daubed overnight on Thursday on the rock on which the statue of the heroine from Hans Christian Andersen’s fairytale rests.
Copenhagen police said they had attended the scene and recorded “a case of vandalism” and that they were trying to find “traces” in the area.
An investigation has been opened into the act seen as a sign of support for Moscow in the war in Ukraine.
A few puzzled tourists photographed the vandalised statue on Thursday morning.
The Little Mermaid, inspired by a character in the Danish author Andersen’s 1837 fairytale of the same name, is a 175kg (385lb) statue by the sculptor Edvard Eriksen.
The statue, which sits in the relatively secluded harbour of Langelinie in Copenhagen, has been vandalised numerous times. The mermaid’s head was stolen in 1964, and her arm cut off in 1984. In 1998, vandals removed her head again, but it was later returned, before the statue was blown up in 2003.
The statue has been tagged and painted many times, most recently in 2020 with the mysterious inscription “racist fish”.
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