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Petition against felling thousands of trees in historic Tokyo park area

TOKYO, Japan — Campaigners filed a fresh petition with almost 225,000 signatures on Monday against plans to fell potentially thousands of trees and tear down a historic baseball stadium in a rare green area of central Tokyo.

Lush with trees donated to honour Emperor Meiji a century ago, Meiji Jingu Gaien offers respite and shade -- Japan saw its hottest recorded summer this year -- in one of the world's biggest urban areas.

The park area is also home to Jingu Stadium where US baseball star Babe Ruth wowed spectators in 1934 and where celebrated Japanese author Haruki Murakami says he was inspired to become a writer.

Also on the site is a stadium dubbed the spiritual home of Japanese rugby.

But the redevelopment project, due to start this month, will see the sports facilities razed and rebuilt alongside several new high-rises to add to Tokyo's thicket of tall buildings.

According to the petition submitted on Monday to the government, 1,000 trees will be cut down while the new baseball stadium will be just six metres (20 feet) away from a boulevard of gingko trees whose stunning autumn leaves attract huge crowds.

"These are all huge beautiful trees," said Rochelle Kopp, a management consultant who organised the petition -- one of several -- and who is also involved in a lawsuit against the project.

"The online petition numbers continue to grow because the more members of the public learn the details of the plan, the more people are unhappy about this plan to cram as many skyscrapers as possible into a small space and forever change a beloved landscape," Kopp told AFP.

'Heritage alert'

The International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) this month put the number of trees in danger at around 3,000 in a "heritage

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