Danish queen to open new enclosure at Copenhagen zoo for two new occupants


Devdiscourse News Desk | Copenhagen | Updated: 10-04-2019 16:36 IST | Created: 10-04-2019 16:25 IST
Danish queen to open new enclosure at Copenhagen zoo for two new occupants
Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons
  • Country:
  • Denmark

Denmark's Queen Margrethe is set to open Wednesday a new enclosure at Copenhagen zoo for two freshly arrived occupants: a pair of pandas on loan from China as the Scandinavian nation becomes part of Beijing's so-called "panda diplomacy." The Chinese Ambassador to Denmark, Deng Ying, called male Xing Er and female Mao Sun "national treasures of China and symbol of peace" when they arrived last week.

The bears were accommodated at a newly-built, 160 million-kroner ($24.2 million) Panda House, designed by Danish architect Bjarke Engels. The monarch will declare the enclosure open later Wednesday. The public can see the pandas for the first time Thursday. The enclosure in the central part of the Copenhagen Zoo is shaped like the Chinese Yin-Yang symbol and has a panda-themed restaurant. The animals will be separated and later brought together during the mating season.

The zoo said six-year-old Xing Er replaced another male panda originally chosen for Denmark after it was discovered he wasn't able to procreate. China has lent out pandas as a sign of goodwill and closer political ties to fewer than two dozen nations. Although China calls the gesture a gift, the pandas are in reality on loan for 15 years and any cubs born during the loan is considered to be the property of China.

In February 2017, China loaned two pandas to Finland and in June, two of the animals arrived at Berlin's Tierpark zoo and the first visitors were German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Chinese President Xi Jinping. The best-known case of panda diplomacy was in 1972, when pair of the mammals arrived in the U.S., two months after President Richard Nixon's trip to China, ending 25 years of isolation and tension between the two. Prime Minister Lars Loekke Rasmussen visited China last year and saw the animals at a zoo in the southwestern city of Chengdu. 

(With inputs from agencies.)

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