His legacy lies in his eponymous AK-47 assault rifle, one of the world's most popular and lethal weapons, and now Mikhail Kalashnikov's likeness looms over Moscow in the form of a 30-foot-tall monument, but not everyone is happy to see it.

Kalashnikov's daughter, Yelena, unveiled the statue Tuesday at a square off Garden Ring Road, a busy thoroughfare in Russia's capital city, according to Reuters.

The bronze Kalashnikov, the man, wields a bronze Kalashnikov, the weapon. The late Russian lieutenant general is casually attired, his jacket unzipped and the top button of his shirt undone.

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The words "I created a weapon for the defense of my fatherland" are etched on the pedestal.

Tuesday's ceremony included military music and a blessing by a Russian Orthodox priest, The Guardian reports. Russian Culture Minister Vladimir Medinsky said the gun had become a "cultural brand of Russia."

But not all Russians were on board with the tribute.

NPR's Lucian Kim reports from Moscow that at least one protester was detained holding a sign that read "a weapons designer is a designer of death."

The statue "reaffirms the image of Russia as a militaristic and neo-imperialistic country that feels it is surrounded by enemies," lawyer Dmitry Shabelnikov told the Guardian.

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"This is not artistic, to put it mildly. This is trash. It's loathsome," resident Natalya Seina told a local media outlet, according to Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. She said the honor could have gone to "probably more worthy people than the creator of a rifle."

The Russian military has relied on the AK-47 for decades, though the rifle's influence has reached well beyond Russia's borders. The AK-47 moniker stands for Automatic Kalashnikov along with the year 1947, when the weapon was first produced. An estimated 100 million Kalashnikov-type rifles are in use worldwide today.

"Mikhail Kalashnikov said he first thought about developing such a gun when he was lying wounded in a military hospital during the Second World War and he heard fellow soldiers complaining about their weapons," NPR reported in 2013, when Kalashnikov died at age 94.

The AK-47 is thought to have killed more people than all other types of modern weapons combined, Reuters reports.

In a 1999 article headlined, "Kalashnikov Kids," The Economist outlined an increase in the numbers of child soldiers used to fight wars, noting that "even ten-year-olds can learn to carry and use lightweight but lethal weapons, such as M16 semi-automatic rifles or the omnipresent aluminium Kalashnikov AK-47s."

As for how he viewed his own legacy, Kalashnikov himself was torn.

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