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Pandas An An and Ke Ke enjoy treats ahead of first Christmas in Hong Kong

The bears were sent to Hong Kong in late September to boost tourism.

By contributor By AP Reporters
Published
Giant Panda Ke Ke reacts to an ice snow man at the Ocean Park in Hong Kong
Ke Ke has appeared before press and visitors at Ocean Park (Hong Kong Ocean Park via AP)

A pair of five-year-old pandas named An An and Ke Ke have enjoyed special treats as they prepare for their first Christmas in a Hong Kong park.

An An, the male panda, was presented with an ice slab that had “Merry Christmas” written on it with sweet potato and carrots while Ke Ke, his female companion, tucked into a snowman garnished with slices of carrot and apple in a special press event before visitors streamed to the park.

China sent the pair to Hong Kong in late September in a bid to boost tourism in the city.

Panda with Christmas treat
The pandas are drawing visitors to Ocean Park (Hong Kong Ocean Park via AP)

They were quarantined for a couple of months before they made their debut to enthusiastic visitors at the city’s Ocean Park theme park, joining four other pandas.

An An is described as intelligent and active while Ke Ke is known to have a gentle temperament and is a good climber.

Pandas are widely seen as China’s unofficial national mascot, as they are only found in China’s south-west and their population is under threat from development.

An An the panda in a comfortable pose
An An took up a perch near a Christmas tree stacked from bamboos (AP)

The Chinese government actively breeds pandas and raises them as part of a national programme. It also loans the animals out in an international program with overseas zoos as part of Beijing’s soft-power diplomacy.

Hong Kong’s Ocean Park has been hosting pandas since 1999, when the first pair, An An and Jia Jia, arrived in the financial hub shortly after the former British colony returned to China.

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