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Denver, CO May 20, 2008 — Director Ke from the State Forest Authority
and Wang Yong Yue of Wolong have announced five deaths have occurred
connected to the Wolong Panda Nature Reserve AND / OR the Wolong Breeding
Center. Four members of the Security Administration and the Police
Director from Wolong lost their lives during the earthquake. All the
directors, veterinarians and staff members escaped serious injuries.
There is no official word being released yet about the Wolong Center’s
pandas except for the following, plus news sent to Pandas International
reporting all the panda houses were damaged:
CHENGDU, May 20 (Xinhua) – A total of eight pandas selected
to entertain tourists at the Olympic Games period, are expected to leave
for Beijing
on May 24 as scheduled, despite the quake hitting their hometown in Sichuan.
The animals, all in good shape, arrived in the panda breeding base in the provincial
capital of Chengdu on Sunday night from Wolong, waiting for a flight to Beijing,
an official with the Sichuan Provincial Forestry Bureau told Xinhua on Tuesday. "They
will take a special plane to Beijing on May 24 if no other accident happens,
but the ceremony and the series of activities to mark their leaving are all cancelled," said
Xiong Beirong, head of the bureau's wildlife protection branch.
The animals would be accompanied by their keepers during the flight. "The
keepers, who are quite familiar to them, will also take care of them during their
stay in Beijing to help them get over any after-quake mental problems," said
Xiong.
Some of the pandas behaved nervously and had less sleep and food after the quake,
which has left nearly 40,000 people killed so far. "It's necessary to have
these people, who began to take care of the pandas since they were born, be with
them now. Especially as they are facing the challenges of living in a strange
place," she said.
A grand ceremony to see off the pandas was to have been held in Wolong-based
China Giant Panda Protection and Research Center, which is home to 86 pandas,
as a promotion for panda protection. However, the 8.0-magnitude earthquake, its
epicenter is about 30 kilometers from Wolong, jolted Sichuan on May 12, leaving
five Wolong center staff workers killed, two pandas injured, six pandas missing
and panda houses damaged.
As of Tuesday morning, four of the six missing pandas had returned to Wolong
and staff are searching for the other two. "Rescuing the missing pandas
and taking care of the others in the center are our top priorities now," said
Xiong, adding aftershocks could be felt in Wolong at every few hours.
The eight two-year-old pandas, selected by citizens from 16 candidates born in
2006 in the Wolong center, will be on display at the Beijing Zoo until November,
and are expected to attract more than six million tourists from home and abroad
during the six-month show. The zoo has already begun to upgrade its facilities
to accommodate the additional animals.
There are about 1,590 pandas living in the wild in China, mostly in Sichuan and
the northwestern province of Shaanxi and Gansu. Another 180 have been bred in
captivity.
More than 60 pandas at another breeding center in Chengdu were reported safe
after the quake. Another eight pandas at a preserve in Ya'an, about an hour's
drive west of Chengdu, were safe as well.
The Wolong center is deep in the hills north of Chengdu along a winding, two-lane
road that has been partially blocked by landslides.
Please check our web site
later today for a link to the first in several
groups of photos provided to Pandas International by the Chinese government
news
agency, Xinhua titled "Mourning — A Minute of Silence."
To make a tax-deductible contribution to support supplies for Wolong’s
Giant Panda Research Center, please send checks payable to Pandas International
at P.O. Box 620335 , Littleton , Colorado 80162 , or view daily updates
and donate online at www.pandasinternational.org.
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