Washington's National Zoo Bids Farewell to Giant Pandas

The Smithsonian’s National Zoo in Washington, DC is hosting a farewell celebration for its three giant pandas. The celebration, called “Panda Palooza,” ends on October 1. The pandas are Tian Tian, Mei Xiang, and their three-year-old male cub, Xiao Qi Ji.

The pandas are being returned to China in early December 2023. The zoo is honoring an agreement with the China Wildlife Conservation Association. The agreement states that cubs born during the lease period are the property of China.

The pandas have brought joy to millions of visitors and generations of fans. The adult pandas came to the zoo in 2000. They had three other surviving cubs before Xiao Qi Ji.

The zoo is honoring the pandas with nine days of events. However, stormy weather and a looming U.S. government shutdown have put a damper on the festivities.

The three pandas at the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington have seen millions of dollars being spent on their care. The experts have carefully studied the animals. A popular 24-hour “Panda Cam” has been monitoring their behaviour.

Mei Xiang and Tian Tian came to Washington in 2000. They have had four cubs. Xiao Qi Ji (“Little Miracle” in English) was born in 2020 and will also depart by December.

During Xi Jinping’s state visit in 2015, the last by a Chinese leader to the United States, his wife and the then-US first lady, Michelle Obama, held an official ceremony to unveil the name of panda cub Bei Bei. Just eight years later, tensions between China and the US seem to be at their worst.

The Smithsonian pays USD 500,000 each year to its conservation group partner in China, reported AFP citing the zoo. There is sadness over the pandas’ return.

The pandas’ departure “closes a major chapter of an international animal care and conservation success story,” the zoo said in a statement, adding that it “remains committed to continuing its efforts to secure and safeguard a healthy future for giant pandas.” The zoo is honouring the pandas ahead of their return with a nine-day event, ‘Panda-palooza’.

But politics has cast a shadow on the festivities. The US government shutdown is looming because of differences in opinion between, and within, the parties over government expenditure. The zoo receives federal funding. In case the government shutdown comes to pass, the zoo will be closed to the public.

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