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One royal statue toppled, another unveiled

Queen Elizabeth II celebrates her 80th birthday with a walkabout through Windsor town centre attended by thousands of members of the public on Friday, April 21, 2006. (UPI Photo/Hugo Philpott)
Queen Elizabeth II celebrates her 80th birthday with a walkabout through Windsor town centre attended by thousands of members of the public on Friday, April 21, 2006. (UPI Photo/Hugo Philpott) | License Photo

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LONDON, May 22 (UPI) -- Vandals toppled a statue of King Edward VII in a Liverpool-area park honoring the British war dead and removed the head, police said.

The act was believed to have been carried out by a group of teenagers who used ropes to bring the 2-ton statue down, The Times of London reported. The head was found in another part of the park.

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"This is simply mindless vandalism," said Chris Burnham, a neighborhood inspector with the Merseyside Police. "It's a despicable attack on a historic statue."

Tom Brady of the Royal British Legion said the vandals' act "dishonors" the young soldiers being killed in Afghanistan.

In London, Queen Elizabeth II, Edward's great-granddaughter, unveiled a statue of Queen Elizabeth I at Westminster School. The statue was placed there as part of the celebration of the 450th anniversary of Westminster Abbey's Royal Charter.

The queen, accompanied by Prince Philip, also attended a service at the Abbey and opened a new education center at the school where a group of children performed Elizabethan dances.

Elizabeth also examined a chair she and her predecessors get to sit in once -- the coronation seat.

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