Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Sri Lanka claims record for tallest artificial Christmas tree

- By BHARATHA MALLAWARAC­HI

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — Sri Lanka unveiled a towering Christmas tree, claiming to have surpassed the world record despite constructi­ons delays and a shorter-than-planned finished product.

The 238-foot artificial tree in the capital city of Colombo is 59 feet taller than the current record-holder, organizers said. The tree’s steel-andwire frame is covered with a plastic net decorated with more than 1 million natural pine cones painted red, gold, green and silver, 600,000 LED bulbs and topped by a 20-foot-tall shining star.

The tree costs $80,000 and was criticized by the Catholic Church as a “waste of money.” The church suggested that the funds better be spent on helping the poor.

Hundreds of port workers and volunteers struggled for four months to put up the tree in time for the holidays.

Work was suspended for six days in early December after Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith — representi­ng the island nation’s 1.5 million Catholics — lambasted the project. Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe responded to the criticism by saying the tree was not being built with public money but with donations from individual­s and private firms.

The Guinness World Records has yet to confirm if this is the tallest artificial Christmas tree. Currently, the record is held by a Chinese firm that put up a 180-foot tree-like tower of lights and synthetic foliage, ornaments and lamps in the city of Guangzhou last year.

Sri Lankan organizers said they wanted the tree to help promote ethnic and religious harmony in the Buddhist-majority island nation, where a long civil war ended in 2009, but reconcilia­tion remains a challenge.

“This is just to show the world that we can live as one country, one nation,” said Arjuna Ranatunga, a former cricket player and the minister of ports and shipping. He said Sri Lanka still is still grappling with issues regarding religion, caste and race.

Minority Christian and Muslim communitie­s complain of state-sponsored discrimina­tion, and there are allegation­s of widespread abuses against minority ethnic Tamils both during and after the war.

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