the papers will be back again tomorrow evening with shyama perera and anne ashworth. dojoin us then if you can. for now, good night. i do hope you enjoy that travel show. this week on the show: pulling down the past... i believe that the monuments would not give a tribute to the regime but they should preserve the history and the memory. it's a question of symbols and for our people it is a symbol of occupation, it is a symbol of soviet troops, and we want to the new page. for 300 years, on and off, estonia was part of russia. ruled first by the czarist empire, then the soviet union. links between the two are many and deep — in fact, around a third of the people here have russian as theirfirst language. but since the invasion of ukraine in february, the government has steered a course very firmly away from its powerful neighbour. there have been travel bans for russian tourists, and something even more dramatic. historic russian and soviet monuments are being removed from public view. and notjust here. the other baltic states, latvia and lithuania, are making similar