The communist regime came to an end in 1992, but the structures that were built in this period still stand tall in the former communist countries as an eerie memento of the infamous period.
Even though, after the fall of the Soviet Union many Communist statues and sculptures were demolished or moved to parks and museums, some of them remain in the same for the last 20 years.
Most of these monuments can be found in the countries that were once part of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (after the Republic dissolved in the early 1990s, they were completely abandoned, and their symbolic meanings were forever lost.) but also in another former communist countries such as Bulgaria and Romania.
Brezovica, Kosovo.
Buzludzha communist monument Bulgaria
Grmeč, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Ilirska Bistrica, Slovenia.
Inside the Plovdiv Hillock of Fraternity, Bulgaria.
Jasenovac, Croatia.
Kadinjača, Serbia.
Kolašin, Montenegro.
Korenica, Croatia.
Kosmaj, Serbia.
Košute, Croatia.
Kozara, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Kruševo, Macedonia.
Makljen, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Mitrovica, Kosovo.
Monument of the Bulgarian-Soviet Friendship, Varna, Bulgaria.
Monument to 1300 Years of Bulgaria, in the city of Shumen.
Nikšić, Montenegro.
Niš, Serbia.
Ostra, Romania.
Podgarić, Croatia.
Russian soldiers facing Moscow. Varna, Bulgaria.
Sanski Most, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Shumen monument, Bulgaria.
Sinj, Croatia.
The area outside Buzludzha, Bulgaria
Tjentište, Bosnia and Herzegovina..
Tjentište, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
sources:1,2,3