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India's top court halts tree felling after protests
by Staff Writers
Mumbai (AFP) Oct 7, 2019

A mass felling of trees in one of the world's most-polluted megacities was halted by India's top court Monday, amid protests their removal would strip the city of a precious "green lung".

Some 2,700 trees were being cut down in the financial capital Mumbai to make way for a depot for subway carriages in the city of nearly 20 million people.

But the felling angered locals, with Bollywood stars and residents joining regular demonstrations that grew over the weekend after workers started removing the trees at night.

More than two dozen activists were arrested during weekend protests were all later released on bail, police said.

Following an emergency hearing called after petitions from activists, the Supreme Court said no more trees in the suburb of Aarey were to be felled until a next court session on October 21.

The date is also when crucial state elections are to be held, with the dispute taking on political significance.

The Shiv Sena, a powerful local ally of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, has criticised the national government over the felling.

The subway project has sharply divided opinion and triggered a nationwide debate over conservation and need for development.

Supporters say Mumbai -- ranked the world's fourth most polluted megacity by the World Health Organisation last year -- badly needs new transport, citing its overburdened colonial-era railway system used by some 7.5 million people every day.

Officials have defended the construction, saying only 30 hectares (74 acres) of the 1,300 that make up Aarey -- a lush, green oasis close to the Sanjay Gandhi National Park -- were being cleared.

Part of the dispute over the development is whether the area should fall under forest protection laws that cover the national park.

Police have barricaded all access points to Aarey, and on Monday stopped activists and journalists from entering the area.

Environmental activist Puja Damadia told AFP that after the decision was handed down, residents reported "hearing chainsaw noises, which means the trees are still being cut".

"We cannot go inside to even vet the information. Mumbai police has not been letting us organise protests anywhere in the city... despite procuring permissions in advance," she said.


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A shortage of Catholic priests in the Amazon is eroding the church's influence in the remote region, bishops in Brazil and Peru warn, ahead of a Vatican synod dedicated to the rainforest. Wilmar Santin, one of scores of Brazilian bishops set to attend the October 6-27 gathering, says the church is ceding ground to more nimble Evangelical rivals and needs to lift its game. "What new paths can we offer our flocks so that they graze here and don't go to our neighbor's pasture?" asks Santin, who pre ... read more

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