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Djab Wurrung Tree: Anger Over Sacred Aboriginal tree bulldozed for highway

The bulldozing of a sacred tree for Aboriginal people to clear land for a highway has sparked anger in Australia.

Djab Wurrung Tree: Anger Over Sacred Aboriginal tree bulldozed for highway

Protesters have long camped at the site in Victoria to defend culturally significant trees, including some where local Djab Wurrung women have traditionally gone to give birth.

But state authorities cut down the Djab Wurrung “directions tree” on Monday, the activists said.

Officials defended the felling, saying the tree was not on a protection list.

In a deal last year, Aboriginal landowners negotiated with the Victorian government to save around a dozen of 250 “culturally significant” trees from destruction.

However, activists independent of the Aboriginal land group have remained at the site near Buangor to try to save more trees.

Victoria Police said they had arrested 25 protesters on Tuesday who refused to leave the site as land clearing work continued.

Footage posted by activists on social media showed officers forcibly dragging people away, and some protesters who had climbed into the trees.

Authorities said the tree removed on Monday was a fiddleback thought to be about 100 years old, but protesters said it was in fact a yellow box species. They estimated it was 350 years old.

Many condemned the news of its destruction.

“Absolutely gutted and feel the pain of our ancestors right now,” tweeted Lidia Thorpe, the first Aboriginal senator in the state parliament and a Djab Wurrung woman.

Aboriginal writer Celeste Liddle blamed the state government for “cutting down a sacred part of Djab Wurrung heritage”.

Many Aboriginal people say the land is paramount to their identity. Djab Wurring activists have previously compared the cultural importance of trees in the area to a church or other spiritual place.

Among trees that will be protected are two “birthing” trees. These are centuries-old trees where women have also buried their placentas after giving birth, as part of a cultural tradition.

Critics were also angry at the timing of the destruction, noting it had coincided with the high-profile announcement of an end to lockdown in the state capital, Melbourne.

Activist-supplied image of the cut-down "Directions Tree" in a truck

Victoria’s government has staunchly defended the highway project – a 12km (7.4-mile) expansion of a road between Melbourne and Adelaide – arguing it will reduce traffic accidents.

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“With more than 100 crashes on the Western Highway in recent years, including 11 deaths, we’re getting on with this urgent safety upgrade that will save lives,” it said in a statement.

It said it hadn’t touched a separate tree identified as “directions tree” – which is protected – and suggested the activists’ classification had differed from the land group’s.

State officials said the project had received approval from traditional owner groups and passed federal environmental and legal checks.

“We’ve listened to Aboriginal voices every step of the way,” said a spokesman.

Earlier this year, the destruction of ancient Aboriginal caves in Western Australia by a mining company also prompted a public outcry, and criticism of Australia’s cultural heritage laws.

Due to the backlash, Rio Tinto’s boss Jean-Sébastien Jacques announced he would step down.

Reference

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