The Malta Independent on Sunday

The other revolt

They will probably pooh-pooh the whole thing, but if I were the government I would be worried about last Sunday’s pro-trees protest in Attard.

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Apart from festa band marches, nothing but nothing would attract people to go out on the streets at mid-day in this searing heat. So the fact that upwards of 1,000 people gathered at the protest, some even tying themselves to trees earmarked to be uprooted is a significan­t event.

There was anger, we read, in the crowd – real, unfeigned anger.

The government, on its part, contribute­d handsomely with stories of the culling of trees following each other and in the most varied of places: the Attard road to Rabat, then the Santa Lucija roundabout and the cemetery hill. To this, various private developers contribute­d with their own tree-culling initiative­s. Suddenly, it seemed as if a war on trees had been declared on the already bare island.

There was a time when Malta was wooded but then trees were cut down to such an extent that only Buskett remained as the remnant of the primeval wood. This is not the only case: most Greek islands were similarly wooded thousands of years ago, but they have been rendered treeless by a variety of factors to become the bare islands they are today.

We have had some efforts at

afforestat­ion, like the one at Salini near the Kennedy Memorial, which is a pleasure to see. And we have had at least two other efforts at afforestat­ion that I know of – one in Comino announced last winter and one facing Ta’ Pinu in Gozo. I invite you to go and see what has been happening. Had these efforts succeeded, they would have made valid arguments to disprove that the government is on a tree-destroying rampage. But no such argument surfaced, simply because the two projects have been allowed to lapse. Instead, the government came up with all sorts of numbers to prove that, for the trees that will be destroyed, others will just be relocated and new ones put in: a rather forlorn argument.

I still think the Central Link project is a good idea, as I said in the TMI leader quoted by Ian Borg on his Facebook page, and I also know for a fact that people who were in high places and who kept silent during the entire saga have now come out of the woodwork because the project will turn their silent culde-sac into a two- or three-lane highway. But that must not mean that Infrastruc­ture Malta has been given any kind of green light to go overboard. We have seen the completion of the

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