"The Council voted unanimously for stripping the Green Bridge and its statues of legal protection," Rūta Evelina Sutinytė, spokeswoman for the department, told BNS.

The Council also recommended that the statues, removed from their site last summer, to be kept at a museum.

The final decision on stripping the statues of their legal protection will be made by Culture Minister Šarūnas Birutis. But the procedure of removing them from the register of cultural valuables would take around three months, the minister's spokeswoman Dalia Vencevičienė told BNS.

"The minister trusts experts' conclusions," she said.

Birutis believes the statues should not be put back on the Green Bridge.

The four groups of statues were removed from the Green Bridge last July, under the pretext that they were in need of repair and presented a safety hazard.

The Soviet-era statues, erected in the 1950s, had been a subject of heated debates, with some saying that they were beacons of Soviet propaganda and therefore had no place in independent Lithuania. Others argued that the statues were part of the city's history, however painful to remember.

Critics of the removal also said that the statues were an inseparable part of the bridge and accused the government of politicizing.

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