UN member states to plant trees to commemorate UNEP @50
By Nneka Nwogwugwu
Each of the 193 United Nations (UN) Member States will on Sunday February 27, plant a commemorative tree, indigenous to each state, to raise the environmental agenda of increasing forest cover world-wide.
At the same time, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), shall be allocated a “‘trees corner or ‘green space’” which they shall adopt, to ensure that the trees, and others to be planted thereafter, are well tended and grow to posterity, beyond the 50th anniversary of UNEP (UNEP@50), to be celebrated from March 3 to 4.
This was announced today by the Ministry of Environment and Forestry Cabinet Secretary Mr. Keriako Tobiko, during a virtual inter-ministerial meeting, where he conveyed that the tree planting ceremony is part of Kenya’s strategy of “greening its cities,” a move that is expected to be adopted by the major cities, as well as urban towns in the country.
The event, taking place at City Park, Nairobi, is also a curtain raiser to the fifth session of the UN Environment Assembly (UNEA -5.2) that kicks off at Gigiri, Kenya on Monday February 28 through to March 2.
The Nairobi City Park, through a Legal Notice on Kenya Gazette Supplement No. 99 dated September 4, 2009 became a protected area. Established in 1921, as a zoological garden, the park has maintained a large tree and plant nursery with a sale yard, where members of the public can buy parts. The forest is indigenous with a number of tree species endemic to Kenya, with over 1,000 species of flora and fauna.
Led by the CS, representatives from the Member States, including several Ministers of Environment from around the globe, shall have the opportunity to ‘speak their national tree language’, symbolically, through the selected trees indigenous to them, that shall be supplied by the Kenya Forest Services (KFS).