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South Koreans bid tearful farewell to beloved panda Fu Bao

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YONGIN, SOUTH KOREA - MARCH 03: Giant panda Fu Bao eats bamboo at Everland amusement park on March 03, 2024 in Yongin, South Korea. Fu Bao, a female giant panda born in Everland amusement park and turning four years old this year, will be transferred to the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda in Sichuan Province in early April under an international agreement. Chung Sung-Jun/Pool via REUTERS

YONGIN, South Korea – South Koreans bid farewell on Wednesday to Fu Bao, the first giant panda born in the country, as she left the zoo where she was born in 2020 to be flown to China in a tearful send-off by a large crowd of fans braving steady rain.

Zoo keepers thanked the panda cub for bringing joy and the fans for the love they had shown Fu Bao in the four years she spent growing up at the Everland zoo. She was then put on a climate-controlled truck to take her to the airport.

“It was a miracle to meet you. Thank you, Fu Bao,” read a message attached to photographs of the panda that covered the vehicle. Fu Bao, which means lucky treasure, had been in quarantine for a month and did not appear before the public.

“This day has really come … the day you are beginning a long journey for the next part of your life,” zoo keeper Kang Cher-won, who had been caring for Fu Bao, said in a farewell message. “Thank you and we’re proud of you.”

Thousands queue

Fans had the last view of her a month ago when thousands of visitors queued up in the early morning chill, many saying they will miss the panda after she’s gone.

The panda is leaving for China’s Sichuan province.

The cub’s parents, 10-year-old female Ai Bao and 11-year-old male Le Bao, arrived in 2016 from Sichuan province, the home of the giant pandas, as part of China’s “panda diplomacy”. Last July, Ai Bao gave birth in South Korea to giant panda twins.

Female pandas can only conceive once a year for a limited period, and cubs have very low chances of survival as they are often born prematurely, usually weighing less than 200 grams (0.44 lb).

(Writing by Jack Kim; Editing by Ed Davies and Michael Perry)

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