Kenyan authorities have moved to block the ‘uprooting and transportation’ of eight baobab trees to Georgia, after the government said that a license to uproot them was issued ‘irregularly’.
In a statementon Monday, Kenya’s Minister of Environment and Forestry, Roselinda Soipan Tuya, said she had revoked a license to transport the trees that had already been uprooted, while a license to uproot the trees had also been revoked.
Documents from the Kenyan Forestry Service seen by OC Media suggest that the trees were destined for the Shekvetili Dendrological Park, which was set up by the founder of Georgia’s ruling party and former prime minister, Bidzina Ivanishvili.
Monday’s statement said that a private company began illegally uprooting trees in Kenya’s Kilifi County for export to Georgia, without receiving a license to do so.
It said the company then obtained a license, which a local official ‘irregularly issued’.
The minister said the trees that had already been uprooted would be held until an agreement was ‘properly regularised’, including a ‘benefit sharing formula’.
The minister added that such activities could go ahead if they complied with the Convention on Biodiversity, which requires the conservation of biodiversity, sustainability, and fair and equitable use of the benefits.
A report by the Guardian in October identified Georgian national Giorgi Gvasalia as being behind the export of baobab trees to Georgia. They reported that Gvasalia began searching for the ‘perfect’ baobabs in late 2019, offering local residents 100,000–300,000 Kenyan shillings ($820–$2,500) for each one.
Gvasalia told the Guardian he was saving the trees, as local residents intended to cut them down to clear land for farming.
Wambui Ippolito, a New York-based Kenyan horticulturist and activist, said Gvasalia ‘specifically targeted the poorest of the poor’.
‘It’s such a bizarre episode. No one knows how he got the permit’, Ippolito told OC Media.
‘Kenyans of all walks of life are traumatised by what he did and we are thankful that he has been stopped’, she said, adding that the Baobab were ‘highly revered’ in Kenya. ‘They balance entire ecologies.’
‘What would Georgians do if a so-called Kenyan investor arrived in your country and decided to collect mountains? They would fight him off. It’s the same thing for us with our trees.’
‘Your former Prime Minister [Bidzina Ivanishvili] sounds like a real piece of work. His behaviour is what happens when a human being is so divorced from a nature consciousness, he begins to believe he has dominion over it’, Ippolito said.
Bidzina Ivanishvili, the billionaire founder of Georgian Dream, is well known for his controversial tree-collecting hobby. Taming the Garden, a 2021 documentary about Ivanishvili’s tree-collecting, caused controversy after Georgia’s National Cinema Academy abruptly cancelled screenings of the film.
Sections of the film that did not make it to the final cut were last week aired by Chai Khana, which showed Giorgi Gvasalia, the director of the company responsible for uprooting baobabs in Kenya, conducting negotiations with officials in Zanzibar to uproot baobabs there. Gvasalia promises to fix the roads in return.
The threat of further Western sanctions against Georgian officials over democratic backsliding in the country has led to reports of alarm within the ruling Georgian Dream party, weeks ahead of parliamentary elections.
On Wednesday, TV channel Formula reported citing confidential sources that bank accounts abroad belonging to the children of Georgian Dream founder and billionaire, Bidzina Ivanishvili, had been limited.
TV station Mtavari Arkhi also reported on Wednesday that Ivanishvili h
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said that Russia is ready to help Georgia ‘normalise relations’ with Abkhazia and South Ossetia, a statement that was met with positivity by the ruling Georgian Dream party.
In response to a reporter’s question about Georgian relations with Abkhazia and South Ossetia during a press conference at the UN General Assembly on Saturday, Lavrov said that ‘if there is an interest in the normalisation of these relations, in order to ensure non-aggression a
The US government has reportedly prepared a package of sanctions against Georgian Dream founder Bidzina Ivanishvili which they are considering imposing ‘in the near future’.
Voice of America reported the news on Friday, citing anonymous US government sources as saying that the US Treasury and State Departments had been leading the development of the package. While previously only discussed, the package is now reportedly ‘ready for implementation’ pending a political decision.
The sources did
Abkhazia has welcomed statements made by the founder of Georgia’s ruling party, Bidzina Ivanishvili, in which he pledged to ‘apologise’ to the Ossetian people for the 2008 War, saying that it could lead to ‘peaceful coexistence’.
In a statement issued on Monday, Abkhazia’s Foreign Ministry said that ‘such a statement, if supported by real steps towards reconciliation based on a reassessment of past mistakes and apologies to the peoples of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, the rejection of methods of