
Chinese restaurant slammed for offering cuddles with LION cubs – and they're not the only wild animals diners can pet
Patrons at Wanhui Tower, based in Taiyuan city, offers a luxury tea service that includes a "mascot interaction" with lion cubs for a hefty price tag of £124.
7
7
Patrons have been posting selfies cradling the cubs on Chinese social media platforms like WeChat and Weibo, with some boasting they were also able to pet alpacas, deer, llamas and turtles – all while enjoying dessert.
But the restaurant's bold move has triggered a flood of criticism and now a formal probe by the Shanxi Provincial Forestry and Grassland Bureau.
Although Wanhui Tower was granted a licence to breed and display two African lions, authorities said that close human-animal contact is prohibited and that the matter is being handled "urgently" – a phrase in China that often signals looming legal trouble.
But the restaurant, located in northern China's Shanxi province, is doubling down.
The eatery claimed in a defiant statement: "We operate like zoos – why can't lions be used commercially?"
Major animal rights groups have since pounced.
Jason Baker, Senior Vice President of PETA, said: "Tearing lion cubs from their mothers so diners can handle them over afternoon tea is exploitation, not entertainment.
"These animals are living, feeling beings, not toys."
He added the cubs were being "treated like nothing more than social media props."
Peter Li, China policy expert for Humane World for Animals, warned the stunt was "not only appallingly bad animal welfare, it's also potentially risky for customers."
'Even a young lion is capable of lashing out and injuring a human,' he said. 'So, treating wild animals like props is both morally unacceptable and dangerously irresponsible.'
The controversy adds to a growing list of bizarre and troubling wildlife gimmicks at entertainment venues across China.
Earlier this year, police in Thailand raided a 'lion café' in Phuket, arresting two Chinese nationals for illegally running a similar pet-a-cub scheme.
Guests there could snap photos with lion cubs for £12–£23.
Closer to home, a hotel near Chongqing drew fire after offering a 'red panda wake-up call,' where guests could have the wild animals brought into their rooms and allowed to crawl into bed with them.
China's zoos, too, are under the microscope.
7
7
In March, a 'very big cat' incident sparked fury after footage of a shockingly obese black panther at Chengdu Zoo went viral.
The panther, aged 16, could barely walk, and social media lit up with criticism over her bloated condition.
One commenter quipped: 'I thought she was pregnant, but it turned out that she was overweight. Please ask her to exercise more.'
Another zoo in Zibo, Shandong province, was caught painting donkeys with black and white stripes to pass them off as zebras – a stunt staff described as a 'marketing strategy.'
Earlier this year, staff at Taizhou Zoo in Jiangsu Province dyed chow chows to look like tiger cubs in a brazen attempt to fool visitors.
The same zoo previously painted puppies to look like pandas.
7
7
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
14 hours ago
- Reuters
Exclusive: Cadence to plead guilty and pay $140 million to US for China sales
July 28 (Reuters) - Cadence Design (CDNS.O), opens new tab agreed to plead guilty and pay more than $140 million to resolve U.S. charges for selling its chip design products to a Chinese military university believed to be involved in simulating nuclear explosions, the Justice Department said on Monday. Cadence was accused of violating export controls by illegally selling chip design software and hardware to front companies representing China's National University of Defense Technology. NUDT's supercomputers are thought to support nuclear explosive simulation and military simulation activities, according to U.S. Commerce Department notices restricting shipments to the university. San Jose, California-based Cadence noted a charge related to the legal proceedings in its quarterly results, also released on Monday. Cadence shares rose 7.8% after it posted the news and its quarterly results. The deal, which comes as the U.S. and China meet for new trade talks, shows the U.S. is still willing to enforce U.S. export controls on China, even as it relaxes some of the restrictions as part of negotiations. NUDT was put on the Commerce Department's restricted trade list in 2015 to keep it from using U.S. technology to power its supercomputers, according to department postings. Other aliases and locations were added to the university's listing in 2019 and 2022, including Hunan Guofang Keji University, Central South CAD Center, and CSCC. The U.S. investigation into Cadence, which began more than four years ago, involved 'historical sales by Cadence to customers in China,' according to a company filing. Cadence received a subpoena from the U.S. Commerce Department in February 2021, demanding records related to certain customers in China. A related November 2023 subpoena followed from the Justice Department over the company's business activity in China. Entities are placed on the restricted trade list, formally known as the entity list, for activities deemed contrary to U.S. national security or foreign policy interests. U.S. companies are not allowed to ship goods and technology to them without licenses from the Commerce Department, which are generally denied. Cadence will hold a call about its second-quarter financial results at 2 p.m. Pacific Time (2100 GMT) on Monday. Cadence, whose customers include major semiconductor manufacturers and companies such as Nvidia and Qualcomm, is known for its electronic computer-aided design software. Electronic design automation (EDA) tools are key to designing chips and verifying that they are bug-free. NUDT has developed chips to power university supercomputers, including Tianhe-2, once touted as the world's best supercomputer, which the U.S. believes has been used in research on or the development of nuclear explosive devices. Twelve percent of Cadence's revenue came from China last year, down from 17% in 2023, amid regulatory developments and geopolitical tensions.


Reuters
15 hours ago
- Reuters
Exclusive: Cadence nears deal to pay over $100 million to US for China sales, sources say
July 28 (Reuters) - Cadence Design (CDNS.O), opens new tab is expected to pay over $100 million to the U.S. government as part of a deal to resolve an investigation into sales of its chip design products to a Chinese military university believed to be involved in simulating nuclear explosions, according to two people familiar with the matter. Cadence is accused of illegally selling chip design technology to front companies representing China's National University of Defense Technology, the sources said. NUDT's supercomputers are thought to support nuclear explosive simulation and military simulation activities, according to U.S. Commerce Department notices restricting shipments to the university. San Jose, California-based Cadence, which said earlier this year it began settlement discussions with the U.S. over sales to China in December, did not immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did NUDT. The Justice Department declined immediate comment. The Commerce Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The potential deal, which comes as the U.S. and China meet for new trade talks, shows the U.S. is still willing to enforce U.S. export controls on China, even as it relaxes some of the restrictions as part of negotiations. The sources said the deal is not finalized. NUDT was put on the Commerce Department's restricted trade list in 2015 to keep it from using U.S. technology to power its supercomputers, according to department postings. Other aliases and locations were added to the university's listing in 2019 and 2022, including Hunan Guofang Keji University, Central South CAD Center, and CSCC. The U.S. investigation into Cadence, which began more than four years ago, involves 'historical sales by Cadence to customers in China,' according to a company filing. Cadence received a subpoena from the U.S. Commerce Department in February 2021, demanding records related to certain customers in China. A related November 2023 subpoena followed from the Justice Department over the company's business activity in China. Cadence sold its EDA technology to NUDT through the CSCC or Central South CAD Center alias about 50 times between 2015 and 2020, according to one source familiar with the probe. Chip developer Tianjin Phytium Information Technology, which traces its roots to NUDT, also has been tied to Cadence sales for the university, another source said. Phytium was added to the restricted trade list in 2021. It did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Several employees at a Chinese subsidiary of Cadence were terminated over the sales, one of the sources said. Entities are placed on the restricted trade list, formally known as the entity list, for activities deemed contrary to U.S. national security or foreign policy interests. U.S. companies are not allowed to ship goods and technology to them without licenses from the Commerce Department, which are generally denied. Cadence will hold a call about its second-quarter financial results at 2 p.m. Pacific Time (2100 GMT) on Monday. Cadence, whose customers include major semiconductor manufacturers and companies such as Nvidia and Qualcomm, is known for its electronic computer-aided design software. Electronic design automation (EDA) tools are key to designing chips and verifying that they are bug-free. NUDT has developed chips to power university supercomputers, including Tianhe-2, once touted as the world's best supercomputer, which the U.S. believes has been used in research on or the development of nuclear explosive devices. Twelve percent of Cadence's revenue came from China last year, down from 17% in 2023, amid regulatory developments and geopolitical tensions.


Times
16 hours ago
- Times
Shaolin Temple's ‘CEO monk' under investigation for embezzlement
F or decades, he has been China's most famous monk. Abbot Shi Yongxin ran one of the country's most revered and historic sites, a sort of Glastonbury Abbey and York Minster rolled into one. Shaolin Temple in Zhengzhou is the reputed home of Zen Buddhism and the 'kung fu' martial arts, known as wushu to the Chinese. But under Shi it became a brand, featuring in films, running networks of schools and martial arts performance centres and cultivating an enormous tourist trade. Shi, 59, travelled the world, with an iPhone and an iPad, earning the nickname 'the CEO monk'. According to allegations levelled this week by the Communist Party, Shi embezzled temple funds, engaged in a number of long-term relationships with women and fathered an illegitimate child.