President Bio takes to the red carpet in style to launch national tree planting

Sierra Leone Telegraph: 07 June 2020:

One can criticise president Bio for lacking in judgement, but he cannot be faulted for his style.  He is the first head of state in Africa – if not the world, to walk on a red carpet to launch his country’s national tree planting campaign. He will not get his feet dirty, let alone his hands wet. In Krio language they say – aristo!

Is this the same president that was once seen in his farm – not wearing wellies and farmers’ outfit but hard hat and polo shirt without the red carpet?

Oh what two years at top of office can do to a leader!

Anyway, let’s be happy for little mercies. At least the president is showing the people that if he can plant trees to help save the environment from deforestation and disaster, so can they. (Photo: President Obama tree planting – no red carpet).

But what is truly worrying is that since coming to power two years ago, president Bio’s government has cut down and exported timber from forest reserves worth over $40 million, especially to China.

Where is all that money gone? Where is the accountability?

Planting odd numbers of trees here and there on a posh red carpet, after cutting down precious forest reserves meant to protect the soil from erosion and mudslide, makes little sense.

Raising government revenue by exporting timber may help pay the salaries of ministers and senior civil servants, but think about the devastation caused to the lives of poor communities and  families.

In 2016 almost a thousand people died in Freetown when a huge section of a hill in Regent collapsed after heavy rains.

Swathes of forests had been cut down to make way for illegal housing development sanctioned by corrupt and greedy officials.

Today we see the same policy continuing under the government of president Julius Maada Bio despite promises to change the way Sierra Leone is governed.

Mr President, walking on red carpet to plant new trees may be stylish – aristo, but says very little about your environmental credentials which as the records show has little to write home about.

Launching the country’s national tree planting, afforestation, and reforestation project at Mortomeh in Bathurst, Freetown two days ago, 5th June 2020, this is what president said:

Ministers of Government, Honourable Members of Parliament, Members of the Diplomatic and Consular Corps, Development Partners, Our revered Paramount Chiefs and community elders, Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen. Good morning.

In the early morning hours of August 14, 2017, an indescribable tragedy happened here. We lost hundreds of our compatriots and billions of Leones worth of property and more. The prominent gash on the green hillside scars our collective memory forever. As one nation, let us observe a minute of silence in their memory and honour.

May God/Allah (SWT) grant them mercies and eternal rest. Amen.

We are reminded every day by that catastrophe that climate change is real and the resulting global warming and unpredictable weather patterns, land degradation, erosion, habitat loss, are all real. This has unsettled ecosystems and altered weather patterns, with an impact for foliage loss and biodiversity, water security, agriculture and food security, and economic development.

Our slash and burn farming techniques, unregulated mining activities, indiscriminate pole and timber harvest, unplanned urbanisation and infrastructural development, bush fires, have all increased the risk of environmental disasters in recent times.

Satellite imagery of the Western Area alone shows stunning tree cover loss just over the last two decades. Over time, all of our environmentally-unfriendly practices and impacts have increased the vulnerability of our people with women and children most at risk.

In my inaugural speech to parliament, I mentioned that Sierra Leone was ranked the 3rd most vulnerable country to climate change in the world or the 3rd country in the world with the least capacity to respond or adapt to environmental change.

The same Verisk Maplecroft Index states that 13 percent of the country’s area and more than 35 percent of the population are at risk of disasters. Therefore, I reiterated my campaign pledge that my administration will focus on the protection of the environment and the prevention of natural disasters in the country.

We have taken proactive measures toward effective environmental governance, ecosystem conservation, the management of forest resources, and environmental education. We have established a stand-alone Ministry of the Environment and we are passing progressive legislation and policies to mitigate and manage environmental risks.

My Government, through the newly established Ministry of the Environment, aims to intensify reforesting the country through the development of Community Forests in a bid to increase tree cover, and consequently minimize the environmental disasters plaguing the country. Thus, the Ministry has developed a National Tree Planting, Reforestation, and Afforestation of degraded lands and coastal areas project. The project aims to develop Community Forests in all the fifteen districts of Sierra Leone.

We are therefore gathered here at Mortomeh this morning to observe the commencement of the National Tree Planting exercise and to launch the National Tree Planting Project.

This National Reforestation and Afforestation Project, which was included in the 2020 budget, will benefit the whole country. It will be pursued along with the Government’s commitment to creating jobs in rural communities. It will initially target 10,000 youths comprising at least 50 percent women.

This project is critical for various reasons:

  1. It will increase forest cover, enhance the capacity of carbon sequestration and biodiversity, and help reduce the adverse impact of climate change on the country;
  2. It will prevent the displacement of populations caused by flooding, as the trees will curtail water from heavy downpours;
  3. t will reduce early and erratic rainfall patterns leading reduced flooding and windthrow hazards;
  4. The national tree planting exercise will provide other ecosystems support functions such as water conservation;
  5. It will help to combat soil erosion along hills and slopes and aid soil conservation in agricultural areas; and finally,
  6. the project will contribute to addressing several UN SDGs, the AU Agenda 2063, and Cluster 7 of our country’s Medium Term National Development Plan.

The co-benefits from health, agriculture, employment, water conservation, to economic development, are too numerous to name in this brief statement.

In general, the project is aimed at planting 5 million trees in approximately 14,706 hectares of degraded lands and coastal areas in the entire country. The project is expected to last for four years and the planting of trees will be done in 5 Phases. Phase 1, which commences this year, will end in June 2021 with 1.2 million trees planted.

Phases 2 to 5 will start in May 2021 and end in June 2024 and 3.8 Million trees will be planted.

In order to foster transparency, accountability, and national spread during the implementation of the programme, I have instructed the Minister of Environment to ensure that the Ministry strictly adhere to the following:

  1. No one organisation should apply for segments of this project in more than 2 chiefdoms of the same district;
  2. No one organization should be awarded contracts to provide or plant more than 10,000 seedlings;
  3. BOs/NGOs should only be awarded contracts for areas in which they have worked before or have personnel who have abundant knowledge of the local area;
  4. Only persons ordinarily resident in their respective chiefdoms shall be employed for the tree planting activity.

Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen, these clear guidelines are to ensure fairness and equity during the implementation of this project. I have directed the Honourable Minister to monitor the administration of this project very closely to ensure that this tree planting project benefits unemployed community youths, pupils/students, women, and to widows, the disabled, and other vulnerable populations across the entire nation.

My government also acknowledges that environmental disasters constitute national security threats and we therefore owe it to our people to provide solutions to these perennial problems. As a Government, we are finalising the establishment of the National Disaster Management Agency within the framework of the National Disaster Management Act.

But I expect an intensification of engagements to go beyond disaster risk management to proactive risk prevention. Hence, I strongly urge cross-Ministry and cross-sectoral collaboration for this national tree-planting and associated green-development initiatives.

On this day that is set aside and celebrated annually as World Environment Day, we are using the National Tree Planting project to raise nationwide awareness at all levels of the significant role trees play in forestalling the environmental consequences of deforestation.

Beyond turning the tide on deforestation and land degradation, my Government fully supports other green initiatives and green economic growth from green energy solutions to conservation-friendly food production methods.

To our development partners, know that our initiative is not merely a symbolic gesture. It is the beginning of a drive towards greening our forests and our living spaces. It sits within a well-considered adaptation strategy that will make our nation more resilient to the adverse effects of climate change. We will continue to associate strongly with multilateral agencies and development partners on achieving green-growth and economic development.

Let me conclude by saying that, to us, a tree is a symbol of peace, life, and hope. But as we formally launch the National Tree Planting, Reforestation, and Afforestation of degraded lands and coastal areas Project, these trees are a symbol of our nation’s commitment to conservation and to green growth and development.

I thank you all.  (END).

But this is the second time in two years that president Bio is launching a national tree planting campaign.  On Thursday 16th August 2018, president Bio launched a National Tree Planting Campaign, to help combat deforestation and promote better management of the country’s eco-system. What has been achieved after two years? Another launch?

How many times are we going to keep recycling the same projects to appear to be delivering on our promises as a government?

3 Comments

  1. Like their predecessor, the current regime happens to be infatuated with formulating/launching ‘never to be fulfilled’ developmental projects in fanfare, featuring fine-tuned written speeches with all the bells and whistles, all with the sole purpose of fooling the electorates and our developmental partners. If reports on this article are true, how can you portray yourself as an environmental activist when your actions say otherwise? The massive increase of timber logging and exportation to China in the last 2 years, spearheaded by well known governmental officials, cannot be anyway associated with a government that is serious in protecting our environment.

    The idea of tree planting to replenish our vastly diminishing forestry in the nation is nothing new. Like the current administration, previous ones have always encouraged and marketed the need to increase our tree planting capabilities, if we are to win the fight against deforestation and minimize natural disasters that comes along with it. An underlying scheme common in almost all of these administrations is ‘hypocrisy’— a good number of government officials have always engaged in a ‘quick rich mentality’ massively exporting timber logs to China. So while I commend the regime in proposing to intensify tree planting across the nation, I am definitely not impressed by their current actions, not the least, a red carpet being use to demonstrate a tree planting exercise.

  2. I commend the president on his tree planting exercise. I hope its not an exercise for the cameras, or be seen as a photo – Op. President Bio has always come to the sharp end of his wardrobe malfunction, by eagles eye Sierra Leoneans who want to see their president dressed up for the occasion. The important thing here is, the tree planting he initiated, should be taken seriously. The index of third place in the world ranking, of the effect of climate change should not be ignored. Some Islands in the south Pacific are already disappearing in the ocean. For the inhabitants of those islands, climate change is not when, is here and now.

    The last thing we want is to fall into that trap. Our country is losing its rain forest at an alarming rate . Apart from empowering , this newly established ministry of environment, the president should give them power to set up a a unit of forestry rangers, to fight and dismantle the bottleneck of mafia type gangsters, in the illegal log trading that is damaging our rain forest. The Sahara desert is spreading, in two hundred years time we don’t know whether part of the country will be swallowed by the desert or the Atlantic ocean submerging Freetown. People in the front line countries, like Burkina Faso, are planting trees to stop the spread of the Sahara desert. We are lucky we have the tropical rainforest for now. We don’t want lose it and start to scramble for solutions. We need to put an end to the illegal logging in the country.

    Can you imagine Sierra Leoneans going to China, or any other county like Guinea, and do illegal logging.? Every day,trucks load of Sierra Leoneans logs are been smuggle to the republic of Guinea, or containers ship to China, whilst our broader guards and or custom, are complicit or turning a blind eye. This forestry guards should able to patrol, and I should be given the power to size this trucks.They will just have to do it to one, or two drivers then the message will get through that your government is serious about this national environmental emergency. The deforestation facing our country, should be treated like the pandemic. The difference here, you can sort it out Mr President, by enacting new policies and flow them through. You might be stepping on a lot of toes, but this is an opportunity to national emergency and should be treated as such.

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