Another monument to the confederates was dismantled in the U.S., in the city of McDono, Georgia, reported local TV channel WSB-TV.
Authorities completed dismantling the monument to the Confederate Army soldiers Wednesday morning, and it has been in McDono City Square for over a hundred years.
The channel said more than 14,000 people signed a petition to support the demolition of the city monument in honor of the southerners, and three weeks ago the Henry County Commission approved the decision.
In the U.S., the spontaneous demolition of monuments to southerners during the Civil War began amidst protests after the death of African American George Floyd by police.
During the 1861-1865 North/South slavery conflict, some states broke away from the United States and formed the Confederate States of America (CSA). The military conflict ended in the victory of the North and the restoration of the United States to its former borders. Slaves were also released, although the de facto situation of African Americans remained unequal in many states until the 1960s.