The
figure was removed between Tuesday night and Wednesday from where it
had stood on a recreational area of the university campus in Ghana's
capital of Accra since 2016.
Ghana's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration approved the
statue's removal, university spokeswoman Stella Amoa told CNN on Friday,
following petitions by the university's council to the government. CNN
contacted the ministry for comment Friday but did not immediately
receive a response.
After
its unveiling two years ago, the monument sparked protests among
students and faculty members, who claim that Gandhi was "racist" and
African figures should be put up first, according to a Change.org petition.
Gandhi
was renowned across the world for his peaceful activism and remembered
for his successful push for India's independence from Britain's colonial
rule. He was assassinated in 1948.
Nicknamed the "Soldier of peace,"
he lived in South Africa for 21 years, but some passages in his early
writings about the African continent have generated controversy.
Citing
passages attributed to some of these writings, lecturers petitioned the
University of Ghana Council to take down the monument, saying the
independence leader made racist comments about black South Africans.
"How will the historian teach and
explain that Gandhi was uncharitable in his attitude towards the black
race and see that we're glorifying him by erecting a statue on our
campus?" the petition reads.
Ghana's
former government promised to relocate the statue after the protests
two years ago, but it remained standing until this week.
Obadele Kambon, head of language, literature and drama at the Institute
of African Studies of the University of Ghana, hailed the move to take
the statue down.
"His utterances when he was alive show
he did not want to be with us black folks," he told CNN. "Why would we
want to be with him after his death by having his statue on our campus?"
Activists in Malawi in southeastern Africa also see Gandhi as "racist" and are protesting the erection of a statue of him in the city of Blantyre.
CNN.com
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