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    Green protest: Tokyo’s tree battle

    TOKYO (AP) – Miho Nakashima stood in a two-piece bathing suit in Tokyo yesterday next to a 100-year-old gingko tree, her body painted head-to-toe in green leaves and brown branches.

    Her message was clear, and she repeated it standing at the heart of the Jingu Gaien park area, its sanctity threatened by a disputed real-estate development plan “I’m a tree,” she said. “Don’t chop me down.”

    A plan approved earlier this year by Governor Yuriko Koike would let developers, led by Mitsui Fudosan, build a pair of 200-metre skyscrapers in Jingu Gaien, mow down trees in one of Tokyo’s few green areas, and raze and rebuild a historic rugby venue and an adjoining baseball stadium.

    Takayuki Nakamura, among a few hundred who gathered yesterday to protest, pressed his face into the bark of one tree and prayed. The area was set aside 100 years ago to honour Japan’s Meiji Emperor.

    “I want to appreciate the existence of these trees. Sometime I can feel some sounds inside,” he said. The planned redevelopment would take more than a decade to finish, and has attracted lawsuits with mounting opposition from conservationists, civic groups, local residents, and sports fans.

    Eighteen ginkgo trees behind the rugby stadium are likely to be cut down. The flashpoint has been trees, green space, and who controls a public area that has been encroached on over the years. Also at issue is the fate of more than 100 gingko trees that line an avenue in the area and provide a colourful cascade of falling leaves each autumn. Botanists said any construction is sure to cause damage. Critics said the plan has been rammed through despite a botched environmental assessment as real-estate developers take what was intended as public land and turn it into a private commercial venture.

    Famous Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami has opposed the plan. And composer and musician Ryuichi Sakamoto sent an open letter to Koike deriding the plan just days before his death on March 28. The rugby stadium was used during the 1964 Olympics, and Babe Ruth played in 1934 in the baseball stadium along with other American stars facing Japan’s best players.

    About 1,500 trees were chopped down in the same area to build the USD1.4 billion stadium for the Tokyo Olympics.

    The Olympics also allowed the city to change zoning laws, which may permit developers to further encroach on the park area.

    “This is like building skyscrapers in the middle of Central Park in New York,” emeritus professor Mikiko Ishikawa at the University of Tokyo, told The Associated Press.

    The Jingu Gaien park area in central Tokyo, Japan. PHOTO: AP
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