Marathon mangrove planting sets a new world record for Pakistan

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Chairman Pakistan People’s Party, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, planting a sapling of mangrove to inaugurate the plantation drive. (Photo courtesy: Bilawal House)
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Volunteers ready for the Sindh forest Department’s drive for making Guinness book of world record here at Keti Bandar, Thatha. (AN photo)
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Volunteers planting mangrove saplings as part of Sindh forest Department’s drive for making Guinness book of world record here at Keti Bandar, Thatha. (AN photo)
Updated 20 April 2018
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Marathon mangrove planting sets a new world record for Pakistan

  • Bilawal Bhutto Zardari kicked off the attempt on the record by planting the first mangrove
  • The activity was aimed at raising the significance of the Indus Delta mangroves

KETI BANDAR, Pakistan: Pakistan has set a new Guinness Book of World record after volunteers planted more than a million mangrove plants on the seashore at Thatha, 65 miles from Karachi.

The day for the assault on the record had been carefully selected. Data supplied by the Pakistan Navy was used to select which day would give them the longest planting time.

Then to kick off the attempt on the record Chairman of the Sindh’s ruling Pakistan Peoples Party, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari planted a mangrove sapling.

“Three hundred volunteers from dawn to dusk planted 1,129,294 saplings of Avicennia marina and Rhizophora species of mangrove at an area of 40,000 hectares, which is a world record,” Javed Mahar, conservator mangrove forests management circle Karachi, told Arab News.

“The record was not the only aim,” Mahar added. “It was a well-coordinated drive aimed at protecting sea life and improving the environment.”

“The current attempt was to plant at least one million saplings of the mangrove species. We achieved more than our target,” Mahar said.

A team of observers from The Guinness Book of World Records was present and verified that 1,129,294 mangrove saplings had been planted within the set time.

Mahar said as per Guinness Book of World Records’ guidelines 300 volunteers had to complete the task within 24 hours.

Earlier, the Sindh forest department in 2009 had set a record by planting 541,176 saplings in Keti Bunder, which was overturned by India in 2010 when 611,000 saplings were planted, but Pakistan reclaimed the title in 2013 when the Sindh Forest Department set a new Guinness World Record at Kharo Chan, Thatta district, by planting 847,275 mangroves.

“The activity was aimed at raising the significance of the Indus Delta mangroves, its affiliated biodiversity and above all, the dependent coastal communities on this fragile and vulnerable ecosystem,” said Mahar, adding all saplings previously planted had made a great impact and were in good condition.

President of National Council of Environmental Journalists (NCEJ), Pakistan, Amar Guriro, who has extensively covered deforestation, sea level rise, coastal forests and impacts of climate change across Pakistan, endorsed the effort.

“All these drives have reduced the impact of the destruction of Delta and this plantation drive is a positive sign for the delta ecology.”

“Upstream diversion of River Indus water, construction of dams and lack of awareness on releasing the sufficient amount of water downstream, the once magnificent river Indus Delta is almost on the verge of destruction. Such massive mangrove plantation drive has brought some hope,” Guriro added.


Monumental art displayed in shade of Egypt’s pyramids

Updated 11 November 2025
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Monumental art displayed in shade of Egypt’s pyramids

  • “There is an estimate that it’s more or less five million people reached by the message of the Third Paradise”
  • A thousand small cylindrical acrylic mirrors planted in the sand compose a Morse code poem imagining a dialogue between Tangun, the legendary founder of the first Korean kingdom, and an Egyptian pharaoh

CAIRO: Installations by renowned international artists including Italy’s Michelangelo Pistoletto and Portugal’s Alexandre Farto have been erected in the sand under the great pyramids of Giza outside Cairo.
The fifth edition of the contemporary art exhibition “Forever is Now” is due to run to December 6.
The 92-year-old Pistoletto’s most famous work, Il Terzo Paradiso, comprises a three-meter-tall mirrored obelisk and a series of blocks tracing out the mathematical symbol for infinity in the sand.
“We have done more than 2,000 events all around the world, on five continents, in 60 nations,” said Francesco Saverio Teruzzi, construction coordinator in Pistoletto’s team.
“There is an estimate that it’s more or less five million people reached by the message of the Third Paradise.”
The Franco-Beninese artist King Houndekpinkou presented “White Totem of Light,” a column composed of ceramic fragments recovered from a factory in Cairo.
“It’s an incredible opportunity to converse with 4,500 years — or even more — of history,” he told AFP.
South Korean artist Jongkyu Park used the measurements of the Great Pyramid of Giza to create the geometric structures of his installation “Code of the Eternal.”
A thousand small cylindrical acrylic mirrors planted in the sand compose a Morse code poem imagining a dialogue between Tangun, the legendary founder of the first Korean kingdom, and an Egyptian pharaoh.
Farto, better known as Vhils, collected doors in Cairo and elsewhere in the world for a bricolage intended to evoke the archaeological process.
Six other artists, including Turkiye’s Mert Ege Kose, Lebanon’s Nadim Karam, Brazil’s Ana Ferrari, Egypt’s Salha Al-Masry and the Russian collective “Recycle Group,” are also taking part.