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Hong KongHealth & Environment

Axing of century-old trees in Sai Ying Pun triggers demands for explanation from Hong Kong government

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A mass of stumpy roots clinging to the stone wall is all that remains of four banyan trees that succumbed to the government's axe on Bonham Road, Sai Ying Pun, without warning on Friday night. Photos: David Wong
Timmy Sung

 

The sudden and apparently surreptitious felling of four century-old Chinese banyan trees in Sai Ying Pun on Friday night has triggered calls for the government to explain its actions.

One tree expert on a government's advisory panel questioned if the decision was "scientific", in the wake of the collapse of another Chinese banyan at the same site about three weeks ago during one of the city's worst storms, injuring two people.

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The unannounced demise of the four trees, which were growing out of a stone wall on Bonham Road, drew dozens of "mourners" yesterday.

Some hung colourful balloons on the roots that remained or held placards reading: "The trees are crying."

INFOGRAPHIC: Everything you need to know about the banyans that define Hong Kong's landscape

"I really miss them. When I was a child, I asked my dad why there were so many beards [roots]," a resident said. "And my daughter asked me the same question. There are so many memories."

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