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Margaret Thatcher statue vandalised for second time in a fortnight

The statue with red paint on it as well as a hammer and sickle painted on the fence around it
The statue is having a dramatic few weeks (Picture: SWNS)

A newly installed statue of Margaret Thatcher has been vandalised yet again, this time with red paint.

The £300,000 sculpture of Britain’s first female prime minister was installed just two weeks ago in Grantham, Lincolnshire.

It hasn’t proved very popular so far, with someone egging it within two hours of it being lowered into place in her home town.

 The 10ft-high granite memorial was originally proposed to be put up in  Parliament Square in Westminster, but was moved due to fears of a ‘motivated far-left movement… who may be committed to public activism’.

Lincolnshire Police said: ‘Just before 11.15pm yesterday we received reports of a person shown on CCTV acting suspiciously near the site.

‘Officers attended and found graffiti had been spray painted onto the barriers surrounding the statue, no damage was thought to have been caused to the statue itself.

Lincolnshire Police has confirmed that an act of vandalism on the Margaret Thatcher statue is being treated as 'criminal damage'. See SWNS story SWBRthatcher. The statue of the former Prime Minister was installed just two weeks ago and in the second incidence of vandalism, it has had paint sprayed on it and the barriers surrounding the plinth. In a statement, Lincolnshire Police said:
The statue had paint sprayed on it and the barriers surrounding the plinth (Picture: Grantham Journal/SWNS)
A man throws a free range egg at a statue of Margaret Thatcher as it is installed
A man throws a free range egg at a statue of Margaret Thatcher as it is installed (Picture: PA)

‘This is being treated as criminal damage and an enquiry is ongoing.’

After a large-scale £100,000 unveiling ceremony was approved by South Kesteven District Council in 2020, a Facebook group proposed an ‘egg-throwing contest’ at the event.

More than 2,400 people confirmed they would take part in ‘egg throwing’ and ‘potentially graffiti art’.

As a result of the warning, the council installed a CCTV camera directly opposite the statue.

Art centre deputy director Jeremy Webster, 59, was ordered to pay £90 for throwing an egg at it on the day it was unveiled.

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from News – Metro https://ift.tt/jOKYsRI

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