Yahoo – AFP,
28 September 2017
Two giant pandas from China arrived in Indonesia on Thursday in an act of "panda diplomacy" aimed at celebrating 60 years of bilateral ties.
One of two giant pandas stays inside a cage as they arrive at the Sukarno-Hatta airport in Indonesia |
Two giant pandas from China arrived in Indonesia on Thursday in an act of "panda diplomacy" aimed at celebrating 60 years of bilateral ties.
Cai Tao and
Hu Chun, both aged seven, arrived from Sichuan province and will be housed at a
safari zoo in Bogor, a city near the capital Jakarta.
The pandas
were lent by Beijing to mark the diplomatic anniversary despite recent tensions
between the nations, with a number of clashes between Chinese and Indonesian
vessels in the South China Sea.
The
delivery is the first time Indonesia has been lent pandas, the country's forest
and environment ministry said, making it the 16th country to be gifted with the
animals by China.
A safari
zoo will be their home for the next ten years once they clear an initial
month-long quarantine.
"We
hope we can breed them, that Hu Chun and Cai Tao will mate so they'll have
offspring while they're here," said Yulius Suprihardo, a spokesman for
Taman Safari Indonesia.
The zoo has
built a 1,300 metres squared panda home for Cai Tao, who weighs 128kg (282
pounds), and Hu Chun, who weighs 113 kg (249 pounds).
Giant
pandas are considered vulnerable and there are only about 1,800 in the wild,
according to conservation organisation World Wildlife Fund (WWF).
China's use
of giant pandas -- a national icon -- as gifts has a long history and has been
dubbed "panda diplomacy".
Indonesia
maintains it has no maritime disputes with China in the South China Sea, unlike
other Asian nations, and does not contest ownership of reefs or islets there.
But
Beijing's expansive claims in the sea overlap Indonesia's exclusive economic
zone -- waters where a state has the right to exploit resources -- around the
remote Natuna Islands.
The
skirmishes have prompted Indonesia to bolster defences there.
In July,
Indonesia changed the name South China Sea to North Natuna Sea to show its
sovereignty in the waters, prompting criticism from Beijing.
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