Sindh sets Guinness World Record by planting over one million mangroves

KARACHI – The forest department of Sindh has successfully broken its earlier Guinness World Record of planting the maximum number of trees in 24 hours by planting 1,129,294 mangroves on an island near Keti Bunder in Thatta.

Pakistan Peoples Party Chairperson Bilawal Bhutto Zardari and Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah separately planted saplings on the island on Thursday to launch the plantation drive.

Bilawal expressed that it was the third time that Guinness World Record was broken by enthusiastic people of Pakistan.

“The same country had set this record earlier in 2009 and 2013,” tweeted the PPP Chairperson.

https://twitter.com/BBhuttoZardari/status/986978897303662594

On the occasion, the Chief Minister Sindh, Syed Murad Ali Shah said that the purpose of their attempt was to highlight and showcase the importance of Indus delta mangroves, its affiliated biodiversity and most importantly the communities dependent on this precious but threatened ecosystem.

Our experience of setting the Guinness World Record in 2009 and 2013 has brought the coastal areas into the limelight and socio-developmental activities are on the rise in these areas, he added.

The forest department was attempting to break its own record of planting 847,275 trees in Kharo Chaan, Thatta, in 2013.

It is worth mentioning that mangroves help to reduce the intensity of tsunami along with protecting environment, ecosystem and more importantly, require only rainwater for their growth.

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