A sad farewell as panda born in Malaysia heads to China

APD NEWS

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Malaysia's first locally-born giant panda headed to China on Tuesday, with officials bidding a sad goodbye to the female cub.

Two-year-old Nuan Nuan, which means "warmth" in Chinese, was born in Malaysia's national zoo in August 2015, a year after her parents Xing Xing and Liang Liang arrived in the country on a 10-year loan from China.

In the wild, giant pandas can only be found in China's mountainous central and southwestern regions where their favorite food, bamboo, grows in abundance.

Baby panda Nuan Nuan plays with her mother, Liang Liang at the Giant Panda Conservation Center at the National Zoo, in Kuala Lumpur.

Nuan Nuan was placed inside a container Tuesday and lifted into a Malaysia Airlines freighter for a four-and-a-half-hour flight to the Chinese city of Chengdu – home to a special research base for giant panda breeding.

The cub was seen lying comfortably on its stomach with bamboo shoots and carrots by its side.

She will be released into the forest after a period of acclimatization, Malaysian Environment Minister Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar told AFP.

"Goodbye Nuan Nuan. Have a good reunion with your kiths and kins you never knew," he said.

Baby panda Nuan Nuan plays with her mother, Liang Liang at the Giant Panda Conservation Center at the National Zoo, in Kuala Lumpur.

Mat Naim Ramli, the director of the Giant Panda Conservation Centre at the zoo, said he had mixed feelings.

"A little bit sad and a little bit happy," he said at the Kuala Lumpur airport.

"Sad because the cub is going to China. Happy because Malaysia has contributed towards panda conservation."

The decision to house the pandas in a special 7.7-million-US-dollar facility had caused controversy in Malaysia, with environmentalists arguing the money would have been better spent on conservation of local wildlife.

Pandas have a notoriously low reproductive rate and are under pressure from factors such as habitat loss.

There are an estimated 1,864 in the wild, according to the International Union for Conservation, which classes them as "vulnerable."

(AFP)