China
2019.11.20 13:34 GMT+8

Bei Bei, an American-born panda, leaves Washington and gets to China

Updated 2019.11.20 13:34 GMT+8
CGTN

A specially-equipped Boeing 777 jet took off from Dulles International Airport on Tuesday carrying a true Washington celebrity: Bei Bei, a 4-year-old giant panda.

Visitors to Washington's National Zoo have watched him grow up since Day One. And now he's headed back to China. 

Under the terms of the zoo's agreement with the Chinese government, any panda born here must be returned to China when they reach age 4. When he reaches sexual maturity after age 6, Bei Bei will be entered into China's government-run breeding program, seeking to expand the vulnerable panda population.

Bei Bei was born on August 22, 2015. /VCG Photo

Bei Bei was born at the zoo on August 22, 2015, the cub (via artificial insemination) of National Zoo pandas Mei Xiang and Tian Tian. His name, which translates as "treasure" or "precious" in Mandarin, was jointly selected by former U.S. first lady Michelle Obama and the Chinese first lady Peng Liyuan.

Zoo Director Steve Monfort called the occasion "bittersweet." He said zoo staff and visitors had grown to love the bear but that his return was important to the future of the species.

Bei Bei makes his first media appearance at Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington, DC, December 16, 2015. /VCG Photo

"Our team has cared for him, learned from him and, along with millions, loved watching him grow," Monfort said. "We're sad he's leaving, but excited for the contributions he will make to the global giant panda population."

The giant panda was once classified as an endangered species. Efforts to save the animal have been successful enough that the International Union for Conservation of Nature changed their status from "endangered" to "vulnerable" in 2016.

There are an estimated 1,800 giant pandas in the wild, all of them in southwestern China.

Bei Bei celebrates his first birthday August 20, 2016. He has brought a lot of joys to the people. /VCG Photo

(Video by CGTN and cover image via VCG)

(With input from AP)

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Source(s): AP
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