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Kenya begins planting billions of trees on new public holiday after worst drought in 40 years

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Hundreds of Kenyans braved heavy downpours to plant seedlings in Nairobi after the government declared Monday a public holiday to encourage citizens to grow 100 million trees across the country.

President William Ruto has vowed to plant 15 billion trees by 2032 in a bid to boost Kenya’s forest cover following the worst drought to ravage the Horn of Africa region in 40 years.

Despite pouring rain, officials, school students and families gathered in various locations in the capital to plant seedlings.

“I have planted more than 50 trees today. I think this is a powerful and necessary initiative for the planet specially after experiencing a dramatic drought in Kenya for several consecutive seasons,” government official Joan Kirika told AFP.

“I hope we keep celebrating this day annually, not necessarily as a holiday but a yearly reminder to care about the environment and think about the planet.”

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North Koreans celebrate annual Tree Planting Day in the capital Pyongyang

North Koreans celebrate annual Tree Planting Day in the capital Pyongyang

Ruto has cast himself as a climate change campaigner, but has faced criticism from environmentalists over his decision in July to lift a nearly six-year ban on logging.

He has defended the move, saying it would create jobs, and adding that it was “foolishness” to let mature trees rot while sawmills were importing timber.

A Kenyan court last month barred the government from lifting the logging ban but allowed the felling of several thousand hectares of mature forest.

In 2018, a government task force said the felling of indigenous trees in Kenya’s forests was “rampant” and warned 5,000 hectares (around 12,350 acres) a year were being cleared.

Members of a Taekwondo academy plant tree seedlings in Nairobi during a nationwide tree planting public holiday on Monday. Photo: AFP

Forestry and logging contributed 1.6 per cent to Kenya’s economy last year, according to government statistics, which also said the total forest cover was 8.8 per cent in 2022.

Kenya’s timber industry employs 50,000 people directly and 300,000 indirectly, according to the government, and the decision to lift the ban came as the economy reels from unemployment and high inflation.

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