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Crowds flock to Tokyo zoo to see pandas before they leave for China
Reuters | January 25, 2026 4:57 PM CST

Synopsis

Tokyo's Ueno Zoo saw a surge of visitors bidding farewell to giant pandas Xiao Xiao and Lei Lei, who are returning to China. Their departure marks Japan's first panda-less period since 1972, prompting thousands to seek lottery tickets for a final glimpse. Many expressed gratitude for the pandas' presence, viewing their exit as the end of an era.

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Visitors flock to see four-year-old female giant panda Lei Lei at Ueno Zoo during the last viewing day before the planned return of twin giant pandas Xiao Xiao and Lei Lei to China, in Tokyo.
TOKYO: Panda fans flocked to the ‍Ueno Zoo in Tokyo on Sunday to say goodbye to its star ⁠attractions - two giant pandas, who will be sent back to China at the end of the month.

The departure of four-year-old twins Xiao ‌Xiao and ‌Lei Lei leaves Japan panda-less for the first time since 1972, prompting thousands ‌to apply for lottery-assigned tickets to say goodbye.

"I've been coming since the parents of Xiao Xiao and Lei Lei were here," said 54-year-old finance-sector worker Machiko Seki. "It feels like one family's story is coming to an end."


While their move to China has been planned for some ‌time, the ‍pandas' coming absence has been viewed as ‍a reflection of deteriorating China-Japan relations in recent ‌months.

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In November, Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said a hypothetical Chinese attack on Taiwan could bring about a Japanese military response. That triggered a furious response from Beijing, which claims sovereignty over the democratically-governed island.

Political tensions were not the focus of many zoo-goers on ‍Sunday, when visitors were allowed one-minute windows to see the bears.

"The pandas have given me so ‍much - energy, ⁠courage, healing," Seki ⁠said. "I wanted to come today to express my gratitude."

Even people who did not win tickets made the journey.

"Today, I didn't win the lottery for the panda viewing, so I can't see the pandas in person," said 49-year-old housewife Akiko Kawakami.

"I came here today because I wanted to breathe the same air as the pandas."


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