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A short history of panda fever worldwide

As China's national treasure, giant pandas have witnessed many significant diplomatic moments and been playing a key role in building China's international image.

Zhan Qianhui (China Daily/Asia News Network)
Fri, November 4, 2016

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A short history of panda fever worldwide Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says hello to Jia Panpan and Jia Yueyue on March 7, 2016, when the cubs officially got their names. (twitter.com/JustinTrudeau/File)

T

he announcement that three giant pandas will be sent back to China has broken the hearts of millions of Americans. After the departure of giant panda twins Mei Lun and Mei Huan at Zoo Atlanta in Georgia in November, giant panda Bao Bao from Washington's Smithsonian's National Zoo will leave for home in early 2017.

The adorable animal has won hearts of fans worldwide as they serve as China's ambassador of friendship. As China's national treasure, giant pandas have witnessed many significant diplomatic moments and been playing a key role in building China's international image.

Diplomatic envoy between 1957 to 1982

Panda diplomacy started in 1957, when a giant panda named Ping Ping was sent to the Soviet Union as a national gift. However, Ping Ping didn't make the fourth year in Moscow due to the difference in climate.

Giant pandas drew worldwide attention for the first time in 1972 when then Premier Zhou Enlai announced China would give two pandas, Lin Lin and Xing Xing, to America during then US President Richard Nixon's ice-breaking visit to China. On April 20, 1972, over 8,000 American people waited in the rain for Lin Lin and Xing Xing's landing at the National Zoo in Washington DC and the zoo received over one million panda visitors the first month after they arrived.

A series of pandas were sent to Japan, France, Germany and Great Britain respectively in the following years as they were playing an increasing influential role in improving bilateral relations.

According to statistics, there were 23 giant pandas being sent to nine countries as gifts between 1957 to 1982. None of them got to come home after being given and all died abroad.

The condition of overseas pandas became a problem as many pandas suffered a variety of diseases and died at an early age.

(Read also: Jia Jia, world's oldest-ever panda in captivity, dies at 38)

 

3 NOV: Schoenbrunn Zoo in Vienna, Austria, has announced that about 12,000 people have voted to name Giant Panda twins which were born on 7 August 2016. The cubs will be given their names during an official ceremony on 23 November 2016. The giant panda is a rare, endangered and elusive bear, famous for their love of bamboo, a diet so nutritionally poor that the pandas have to consume up to 20kg each day. The extra digit on the panda's hand helps them to tear the bamboo and their gut is covered with a thick layer of mucus to protect against splinters. Habitat loss is the greatest cause of the giant panda's decline, and today their range is restricted to six separate mountain ranges in western China. PHOTO: Schoenbrunn Zoo/Daniel Zupanc/REUTERS #BBCSnapshot #photography #nature #panda #zoo #endangered

A photo posted by BBC News (@bbcnews) on

1984-1994 commercial counselor

In order to protect the endangered species, China halted the program of giving giant pandas for free in 1982 and launched the panda renting project in 1984, in which foreign governments would need to pay for pandas to stay in their country for a short term, turning pandas' roles from being diplomatic envoys to commercial earners.

Between 1984-1988, dozens of cities in North America signed the renting contracts with China. And a three-month show in the US brought millions of dollars in revenue. Distinguishing themselves from the diplomatic stage, pandas once again proved their value in the commercial field.

Frequent events abroad delayed giant panda's breeding and training them for acrobatic shows also drew criticism.

1994-now cooperative breeding

The cooperative breeding program replaced the renting project in 1994. Under the new agreement, a receiving country needs to pay China $10 million for a 10-year loan of giant pandas. Two giant pandas were sent to Japan as scientific research envoys for the first time in 1994.

During the past 22 years, the effect of the project has been well received as this kind of cooperation proved to be more beneficial for the comprehensive research on giant pandas.

Mei Lun, Mei Huan and BaoBao are all part of the 10-year China-US cooperative breeding project which started in 2000.

According to the cooperative breeding agreement between China and the US, all cubs born in the US should move to China when they are 4 years old. Now four US zoos - in Washington, Atlanta, Memphis and San Diego - now house giant pandas.

By now, China has built long-term cooperative projects with 12 countries with a total of 48 giant pandas (including cubs born overseas) living abroad.

Giant pandas' decades of diplomatic service has won them worldwide adoration and made them the most successful ambassadors of China. Nearly 60 years later, the fever for these Chinese cuties has not cooled.

Though the young pandas' departures may be heart-breaking for Americans at present, one thing we can be sure of is that the giant pandas will keep bringing joy and happiness to people across the world.

(Read also: National Zoo hosts sweet birthday bash for panda cub Bei Bei)

Pandas abroad: US

Mei Lun and Mei Huan, born on July 15, 2013 at Zoo Atlanta in Georgia, were the first surviving US-born pair of giant panda twins.

BaoBao, born on Aug 23, 2013 at the Smithsonian's National Zoo in Washington DC, was the child of the superstar couple Mei Xiang and TianTian, who were sent to the US in 2000 under the cooperative breeding agreement. On her 100-day birthday, BaoBao became the first panda to receive blessing videos from both the first ladies of China and the US, Peng Liyuan and Michelle Obama.

Japan

The Japanese are truly obsessed with giant pandas. Ever since the first pair, Kang Kang and LanLan, settled in Tokyo's Ueno Zoo in 1972, hundreds of thousands of Japanese people's hearts have been captured. To make sure that Kang Kang and LanLan would arrive safely, government even sent fighters to escort the panda plane.

In 2011, the arrival of a panda couple, Li Li and Zhen Zhen, stirred a new round of panda mania. Various panda-themed products kept emerging on shelves. The next year, a panda cub was born and the news lifted the Japanese from their grief over the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Disaster.

However, the newly-born cub didn't make his first week, which astounded the whole country. The zoo director kept blaming himself and burst into tears during the live news. Crowds of people brought flowers to the zoo to send their condolences.

A Japanese TV station interviewed a panda keeper when two pandas were about to go back to China. Speaking of the leaving pandas, the keeper couldn't stop crying in front of the camera. Pandas were seen off by Japanese people in tears.

(Read also: RI, China to resume talks on panda-Komodo exchange)

 

No Filter for Jia Jia because she is the real deal ❤️#panda #love #singapore #riversafari

A photo posted by Nikita Fernandes (@nikita94fern) on

UK

TianTian and Yang Guang, who moved to Britain in 2011, were the only two giant pandas in the UK. Their arrival brought a new impetus to the local economy in Scotland. The annual income of Edinburgh Zoo has risen from 5 million pounds ($6 million) to 15 million pounds ($18 million) since the pandas' arrival, with a 51% increase in visitors. The zoo even installed a panda cam for people to view the pandas' daily life through the internet.

One key issue that concerned most British during the Scotland Independence Referendum is who the two pandas would belong to. As a gift to the UK, they would be moved to England if Scotland became independent, which angered the Scottish, whose rallying cry was "Keep your hands off our pandas".

Germany

BaoBao received a head of state-level welcome ceremony when sent to Germany in 1980 and enjoyed VIP treatment at Berlin Zoo. But his luck didn't continue on the dating market and his lovelife was not smooth sailing.

TianTian, the original partner sent to Germany with BaoBao, died early. In order to find a perfect mate for BaoBao, the Berlin Zoo arranged a cross-border date by sending it to the UK. But the two pandas started fighting the very moment they met and the blind date ended in injury.

The zoo didn't stop trying and borrowed another panda, Yan Yan, from China in 1997 in the hope of a good result. Staff conducted artificial insemination on Yan Yan for eight consecutive years but all efforts failed. Yan Yan died of intestinal disease in 2007, leaving BaoBao alone in his later years. BaoBao passed away five years later and he was the oldest male giant panda.


This article appeared on the China Daily newspaper website, which is a member of Asia News Network and a media partner of The Jakarta Post
 

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