The Phnom Penh Post

King urges tree planting on Arbour Day

- Khouth Sophak Chakrya

ON A visit to Kratie province on Tuesday to celebrate Arbour Day, also known as National Tree Planting Day, King Norodom Sihamoni called on the people to plant trees in public areas and on their farmland and join together to prevent deforestat­ion and environmen­tal crimes.

His plea was made during a visit to Sre Treng village in Sambor district’s Kbal Damrei commune to celebrate Arbour Day when, every year on July 9, King Sihamoni attends a treeplanti­ng ceremony.

During the ceremony, the King reminded people of the importance of forests to biodiversi­ty and the ecosystem.

He said forests contribute significan­tly to the economy, culture, tourism and social wellbeing.

The loss of the Kingdom’s forests, he said, would lead to flooding, thundersto­rms, drought and the loss of soil nutrition, all of which would result in a loss of income for villagers.

King Sihamoni also called on monks, the local authoritie­s and public to plant various kinds of trees, including palm trees, in public spaces, pagodas, villages and farms and alongside streets, national roads and canals.

Trees offer shade for people and animals, he said, and provide wood for constructi­on materials and charcoal.

Planting more trees will reduce the demand for timber, help battle climate change and increase the nutrition levels of agricultur­al land, King Sihamoni said.

“In order to protect and maintain our forests and wildlife for this generation and those to come, I would like everybody to prevent and stop all illegal deforestat­ion, logging, burning of forest land, illegal wildlife hunting and the setting of traps,” he said.

The King also planted trees as a symbol of Arbour Day.

Some 13,135 rare and luxury tree saplings – including korkoh, angkanh, thnong, kranhuong and korki – are being planted on 10ha of land in Sambor district’s Kbal Damrei commune where the ceremony was held.

Provincial Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries Department deputy director Ok Darun told The Post that all the saplings had been planted, except for 600 thnong and 35 korki saplings – all of which are more than 2m high and had been brought to be planted on the day.

Arbour Day was first celebrated in Cambodia in 1952 on the initiative of the late King Father Norodom Sihanouk with the aim of encouragin­g people to plant and take care of trees.

In a Facebook post on Tuesday, Prime Minister Hun Sen called on all Cambodians to instil in one another the love of trees and to plant them where possible and take care of the Kingdom’s natural forests and the environmen­t “for the sake of our livelihood­s, our communitie­s, all kinds of wildlife, biodiversi­ty and the ecosystem”.

He expressed his admiration for relevant ministries, department­s, institutio­ns and authoritie­s at all levels – as well as national and internatio­nal communitie­s, donors, developmen­t partners and residents – for joining in the task of protecting the environmen­t and planting more trees throughout the Kingdom.

Minister of Informatio­n Khieu Kanharith and Minister of Environmen­t Say Sam Al attended an Arbour Day celebratio­n in Lumphat district’s Lbaing II commune in Ratanakkir­i province held by the Airavata Elephant Foundation.

Airavata president Rath Khai Chenda said the associatio­n was establishe­d in Ratanakkir­i in 2016 by her family “to protect on a small scale, a human scale, the last elephants of the province and the forest where they were born”.

More than 2,000 tree species have been planted in their preservati­on area, aiming to serve as a shelter for elephants and attract national and internatio­nal tourists to the province.

“Airavata Elephant Foundation currently has four elephants – two males and two females. In the future, the associatio­n will buy more elephants from Thailand’s Surin province or from Myanmar,” Chenda said.

Sam Al said: “The Ministry of Environmen­t will donate $20,000 a year to the associatio­n so it has the possibilit­y to flourish in a sustainabl­e manner.”

Kanharith said the idea to create an ecotourism area for elephants was extremely valuable and would help to alleviate poverty in the community by generating income from its many visitors.

 ?? NA FB ?? On a visit to Kratie province on Tuesday to celebrate Arbour Day, King Norodom Sihamoni called on the people to plant trees in public areas and on their farmland and join together to prevent deforestat­ion and environmen­tal crimes.
NA FB On a visit to Kratie province on Tuesday to celebrate Arbour Day, King Norodom Sihamoni called on the people to plant trees in public areas and on their farmland and join together to prevent deforestat­ion and environmen­tal crimes.

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