Archive for ‘panda cubs’

06/09/2019

‘Hong’ and ‘Kong’ top Berlin panda name poll

Two panda cubsImage copyright AFP
Image caption Meet Hong and Kong?

Two newborn panda cubs at Berlin Zoo have been unexpectedly caught up in Hong Kong’s political unrest, after German newspapers started a campaign to name them “Hong” and “Kong”.

The pair were born on Saturday evening to Meng Meng – a panda on loan from China.

One of Berlin’s leading papers, Der Tagesspiegel, asked its readers to come up with name suggestions.

Top of the poll: “Hong” and “Kong”.

One reader wrote in to say they should be named “in solidarity with a city fighting for survival”.

Other suggested names included “Joshua Wong Chi-fung” and “Agnes Chow Ting” – after two prominent Hong Kong democracy activists.

Loaning pandas to zoos around the world is part of China’s soft diplomacy, aimed at winning hearts and minds abroad.

As the cubs will have to be returned to China in two to four years, the paper suggested that naming them after the activists might even be a sneaky way of keeping them in Germany.

The poll is in no way binding or even related to the zoo – but it was soon picked up by Germany’s leading tabloid, Bild, which issued a passionate call “to politicise” the naming of the little pandas.

“Bild is choosing to call the panda cubs Hong and Kong because it’s China’s brutal politics that lies behind these panda babies,” the paper wrote on Thursday.

“Bild is demanding of the German government that it reacts in a political way to the birth of these small bears.”

As German Chancellor Angela Merkel is currently on a visit to China, Bild said she could even relay the news to President Xi Jinping in person.

Panda mother with cubImage copyright EPA
Image caption Mother panda Meng Meng has been on loan to Germany since 2017

Hong Kong activists had already called on Ms Merkel to raise their cause during her talks in Beijing.

In an earlier interview with Bild, activist Joshua Wong had suggested the zoo should name the animals “Freedom” and “Democracy”.

The German media’s foray into panda PR came as Hong Kong’s government launched a series of full-page adverts in international newspapers, designed to reassure investors that the city is still open for business.

The ads, which will run in leading papers around the world, say the government is determined to achieve a “peaceful, rational and reasonable resolution” to present political tensions.

Source: The BBC

02/09/2019

Double happiness for Berlin as resident panda gives birth to twins

  • Germany welcomes first panda cubs born in the country
  • Zoo reports mother and babies doing well and in good health
Chinese giant panda Meng Meng has given birth to twins at Berlin zoo, the first pandas to be born in Germany. Photo: EPA-EFE
Chinese giant panda Meng Meng has given birth to twins at Berlin zoo, the first pandas to be born in Germany. Photo: EPA-EFE

Berlin zoo is celebrating the safe arrival of panda twins, in the first time that the rare animals have been born in Germany.

Resident panda Meng Meng delivered her first cub on Saturday evening, with the second baby arriving about an hour later.

The zoo posted a video on Twitter of the new mother guiding one of her pink babies to feed, with the announcement: “Meng Meng became a mom – twice! We are so happy, we are speechless.”

The cubs weighed in at 136 and 186 grams but their genders had not been determined, the zoo said.

Meng Meng guides one of her newborn panda twins to feed. Photo: EPA-EFE
Meng Meng guides one of her newborn panda twins to feed. Photo: EPA-EFE

“Meng Meng and her two cubs coped well with the birth and are all in good health,” zoo director Andreas Knieriem said.

At birth, the pink cubs, with their fine white down and disproportionately long tails, bear little resemblance to the adult black and white bears.

The births are particularly rare as it is notoriously hard to breed pandas.

Famed for its “panda diplomacy”, China has sent its national treasure to only about a dozen countries as a symbol of close relations.

The zoo pays US$15 million for a 15-year contract to host them, with most of the money going toward a conservation and breeding research programme in China.

While the cubs are born in Berlin, they remain Chinese and must be returned to China within four years after they have been weaned.

China has previously given three pandas to Germany but the last one, 34-year-old Bao Bao, died in Berlin in 2012, having become the oldest male panda in the world.

About 1,864 pandas remain in the wild in China, up from around 1,000 in the late 1970s, according to the environmental group WWF.

Just over 400 pandas live in zoos around the world, in conservation projects set up with Beijing.

Source: SCMP

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