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Kenya's president saves fig tree from Chinese-funded highway

Motorcycle riders sit in the shade provided by the iconic, century-old fig tree during a protest to save it from being cut down to pave way for a Chinese-funded highway, in Westlands district of Nairobi, Kenya November 11, 2020. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya

Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta has issued a decree to save a much-loved century-old fig tree from being cut down to make way for a Chinese-funded highway in the capital Nairobi.

The presidential decree described the tree, the height of a four-storey building, as a "beacon of Kenya's cultural and ecological heritage."

The fig tree is considered sacred among Kenya's most populous ethnic group, the Kikuyu.

Kenyan environmental activist Phyllis Wamaitha holds a placard as she sits atop a fig tree during a protest to save the iconic, century-old tree from being cut down to pave way for a Chinese-funded highway, in Westlands district of Nairobi, Kenya November 11, 2020. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya

Environmentalists had been campaigning against the planned destruction of the tree, which stands on Waiyaki Way in the west of the city, where engineers are building the expressway above the existing road on pillars.

"It is now a presidential declaration that this tree will be conserved," Mohammed Badi, director general of Nairobi Metropolitan Services (NMS), told a news conference next to the tree.

The East African nation's roads agency had said in October it planned to uproot and transplant it in order to erect a pillar to support the expressway.

A tree stump is seen across the road from an iconic, century-old fig tree during a protest to save it from being cut down to pave way for a Chinese-funded highway, in Westlands district of Nairobi, Kenya November 11, 2020. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya

The tree will be adopted by the NMS on behalf of the city's residents and both the China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC) and the Kenya National Highways Authority have agreed to reroute the road.

The tree will now stand as a sign of the city's aspirations, said Elizabeth Wathuti, a prominent Kenyan environmental activist.

"This particular fig tree is just a symbol of the bigger picture of what we are asking for. We want a green and clean city, and clean Kenya."

Parklands area chief Evans Omulubi stands with environmental activists Elizabeth Wathuti, Phyllis Wamaitha and Caroline Wambui as they hold placards to save an iconic, century-old fig tree from being cut down to pave way for a Chinese-funded highway in Westlands district of Nairobi, Kenya November 11, 2020. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya

(Reporting by George Obulutsa; Editing by Duncan Miriri and Alexandra Hudson)

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