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Albo reconnects with Aussie icon in China
Albo reconnects with Aussie icon in China

Perth Now

time17-07-2025

  • Business
  • Perth Now

Albo reconnects with Aussie icon in China

In a display of when-in-Rome statesmanship, Anthony Albanese has visited one of the world's biggest panda breeding centres on the final full day of his visit to China. With 260 of the furry friends, the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding houses one third of China's total panda population in captivity — a source of pride for the city, with monuments to the bamboo-loving creatures scattered across the metropolis. After a couple of days of high stakes, high-level talks in Beijing, the Prime Minister was all smiles when confronted with the centre's occupants, including Fu Ni, who spent 15 years as a star attraction at Adelaide Zoo before being returned to China in November. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese visited the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding in China, on Thursday. NewsWire/ Joseph Olbrycht-Palmer Credit: News Corp Australia He was also able to reconnect with Fu Ni, who spent 15 years at Adelaide Zoo before returning to China in November. Adrian Mann / ZoosSA Credit: Supplied 'They're beautiful animals,' Mr Albanese remarked to his guide as he watched an adolescent panda snack on a bamboo shoot. The visit to the research base came nearly 40 years after former prime minister Bob Hawke visited the same facility and secured Australia's first panda lease. It made Australia the first and only country in the Southern Hemisphere to have Chinese pandas. A panda at the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding. NewsWire / Joseph Olbrycht-Palmer Credit: News Corp Australia In brief comments to media, Mr Albanese said he was 'feeling the friendship between Australia and China'. 'They are great ambassadors for China and a great sign of friendship,' he said. 'The fact that Adelaide Zoo has the only pandas in the Southern Hemisphere is a sign of friendship between our two countries.' Mr Albanese lauded Chinese counterpart Li Qiang for deciding to lease another two pandas to Adelaide Zoo during his state visit to Australia last year. The new pandas arrived at their new home earlier this year. Mr Albanese has been keen to follow in the steps of past Labor legends on his trade-touting trip, visiting on Wednesday the same section of the Great Wall as Gough Whitlam did some 50 years ago.

All 4 pandas at Wakayama Pref. zoo depart for China, leaving 2 in Japan
All 4 pandas at Wakayama Pref. zoo depart for China, leaving 2 in Japan

The Mainichi

time28-06-2025

  • The Mainichi

All 4 pandas at Wakayama Pref. zoo depart for China, leaving 2 in Japan

WAKAYAMA (Kyodo) -- All four giant pandas on loan to a western Japan zoo left for China on Saturday, ahead of the expiration of their lease agreement. The 24-year-old Rauhin and her offspring -- Yuihin, 8, Saihin, 6, and Fuhin, 4 -- left Adventure World amusement park in Shirahama, Wakayama Prefecture, for the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding in China's Sichuan Province, according to the zoo operator. Their departure means that only two giant pandas remain in Japan. Both are at Tokyo's Ueno Zoological Gardens and are also due to return to China next February. About 1,400 visitors queued at the park before it opened for their final public display on Friday, and some 3,000 people attended a farewell ceremony. "It is sad that they leave Japan all at once. I wish for them to stay healthy in China," said Chisato Noda from Nagoya. "I want to visit China to see them. Maybe I'll plan a trip," said Yumi Yokoyama from Ageo, Saitama Prefecture, near Tokyo. The pandas were last on display in outdoor enclosures in May. Over the past month, the public had been able to see them in isolated rooms where they were quarantined ahead of their travel. Chinese government spokesman Guo Jiakun said Friday that China and Japan have established "sound cooperation ties" through panda conservation and research. "We stand ready to continue enhancing exchanges and cooperation with Japan and other partners in the world to jointly contribute to the protection of the endangered species," he told a press conference in Beijing. The Wakayama Prefecture zoo began a joint breeding program with the Chinese panda research base in 1994. It has successfully raised 17 cubs, the most outside China. "The breeding project is finished for now, but we are willing to prepare to accept new pandas in future," the zoo's director Koji Imazu said.

Zoo Atlanta in talks to bring back giant pandas
Zoo Atlanta in talks to bring back giant pandas

Axios

time19-02-2025

  • General
  • Axios

Zoo Atlanta in talks to bring back giant pandas

Zoo Atlanta officials say they've started talks with China to bring back giant pandas to the city. Driving the news: Zoo officials announced Wednesday that they were "engaging in dialogue" with China and would begin preliminary design work on a giant panda complex to prepare for the big ole goofy creatures' future — but yet to be determined — return. Catch up quick: The zoo's loan agreement with China ended in October 2024, and not long after, the pandas Lun Lun and Yang Yang and their two youngest kiddos Ya Lun and Xi Lun returned home. "All now reside at the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, as do Lun Lun's and Yang Yang's five previous offspring," the zoo said in a statement. Zoom out: Like Atlanta, the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington, D.C., returned its pandas to China last year per terms of the zoo's loan agreement with the Chinese government. A return was uncertain at the time, but China sent two new pandas over, and they debuted at the zoo last month. Caveat: Zoo officials say they don't have a formal agreement, meaning no current timeline.

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