Thai museum covers up Hitler billboard after protests
In this photo taken Sunday, Oct. 11, 2009, a billboard showing Adolf Hitler saluting is erected in the middle on a highway in the resort town of Pattaya, Chonburi province southeastern Thailand. The Thai language on the billboard said, "Hitler is not dead."
BANGKOK — A Thai waxworks museum has apologised and covered up a giant billboard of Adolf Hitler giving a Nazi salute after the Israeli and German embassies lodged complaints, its director said Sunday.
The billboard was one of four featuring pictures of famous dead people set up on a highway to the beach town of Pattaya, about an hour's drive southeast of Bangkok, to promote Louis Tussaud's Waxworks opening there next month.
Alongside the picture of the Nazi dictator, erected more than two weeks ago, a large Thai-language slogan said: "Hitler is not dead."
Museum director Somporn Naksuetrong said the billboard had been covered up after "a lot" of complaints poured in, including from the Israeli and German embassies.
"We didn't choose Hitler with the intention of praising him, but because he is well-known," Somporn told AFP.
"But we understand (why they are not happy). It is sensitive for some people and countries," he added.
Israeli Ambassador Itzhak Shoham said the billboard was "not only offensive to the Holocaust survivors but also to anyone who deplores racist behaviour".
"How this could happen is beyond my understanding and comprehension," he was quoted as saying by the Bangkok Post newspaper.
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