In 1990 a statue of Gandhi was made and put in place in Amsterdam
in a street named after Churchill.
Triveda a Hindu organisation had taken the initiative and paid for it. Every October 2 the birthday of Gandhi is celebrated.
Already at that time there was controversion about it because of the racist behaviour of Gandhi.
But there was also the argument that this Gandhi statue located in the Churchill-street countered Churchill (those two being arch-enemies)
And forbidding the Gandhi statue and then re-naming the Churchill-lane was no option despite Churchill clearly being controversial as well.
As context: when Surinam got independency in the 70ies, many Surinam people moved to the Netherland. There are now 600,000 people in Surinam and 400,000 Afro-Surinam and Hindu-Surinam people in the Netherlands. Many Hindu-Surinam people left Surinam with as argument that besides the economical choice, they were also afraid of discrimination in Surinam. The problems that Hindu minorities had in English African (former) colonies were not yet that long ago in history. Like with Idi Amin who expelled early 70ies the Hindu minority.
So
Which group is now served best ?
* The traditional older population wanting to keep Churchill for the name of the street
* The traditional population wanting Gandhi as "example" that rebellion can be done peacefully
* The activist Hindu minority group wanting Gandhi
* The activist antiracism minority groups (except Hindu) wanting neither Churchill or Gandhi
The compromis decision was to have that Gandhi statue in the Churchill-street.
When the city council of Amsterdam would now decide to remove Gandhi, the Hindu minority organisations will feel discriminated and angry, and could demand to rename the Churchill street.
My personal opinion is to rename the street and remove the Gandhi statue out of the public roads and squares space to the park of a museum.
And Churchill can get a (new) statue in the war museum (Overloon) in the Netherlands if too many people are still attached to Churchill because of WW2.
(but then as should happen in museums, including the story of the Englandspiel of Churchill where many Dutch resistance people were betrayed (and died) by Churchill as desinformation to the Nazi's on D-Day, and a good balanced general story but also including the Ireland Black and Tans)