Lenin mausoleum reopens in Moscow after renovation

Moscow, May 15 (IANS/RIA Novosti) The mausoleum housing the remains of Russian communist leader Vladimir Ilyich Lenin reopens here Wednesday after repairs that fixed the “sinking” foundation and restored the original lighting, authorities said.

The mausoleum is located in Moscow’s Red Square.

The Federal Guards Service (FGS), charged with protection of top officials and certain federal properties, said the mausoleum was closed to public in September 2012 as experts were concerned about the leaking roof and unstable foundation of Moscow’s top tourist attraction.

Lenin’s Tomb has not undergone major repairs in over 80 years.

“All the renovation work has been done by the end of April, but the opening was postponed until after the Victory Day parade on Red Square [on May 9],” FGS spokesperson Sergei Devyatov said Tuesday.

The mausoleum’s foundation has been reinforced with 350 piles around the perimeter of the monolith block, the official said. “The repairs also included water-proofing of the upper level of the mausoleum and restoration of the original lighting of the upper-level colonnade.”

During the repairs, Lenin’s body stayed enclosed in its normal sarcophagus inside the building, which was covered with a giant inflatable dome to ensure protection from potential damage.

Lenin died Jan 21, 1924 but, despite his stated wish, his corpse was embalmed and placed in a specially-built mausoleum on Moscow’s Red Square.

Over the years of Soviet rule, crowds of Soviet citizens and foreign tourists and officials visited the shrine. However, proposals that Lenin’s mummy should be removed from the heart of Moscow arose immediately after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.

According to most recent public opinion polls, almost half of Russians believe that Lenin’s body should be removed from the mausoleum and buried at a cemetery.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said in 2010 that the time when the Russian people decide on the fate of Lenin’s mummy is still to come, adding that history shows a strong dislike for haste and disturbances.

–IANS/RIA Novosti

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