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#Tokyo’s Ueno Zoo announces names for panda cub twins

#Tokyo’s Ueno Zoo announces names for panda cub twins

TOKYO — Giant panda twins born at Tokyo’s Ueno Zoo in June got their names Friday — Lei Lei for the female cub, and Xiao Xiao for her brother. They were chosen from hundreds of thousands of suggestions sent from fans around Japan.

The twin cubs, which were palm-size pink creatures when born on June 23, have grown and now have their unique black-and-white blocks, with black fur around their eyes, ears and limbs.

Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike announced their names during her weekly news conference. She said Xiao Xiao means “the light of dawn turning brighter,” and Lei Lei portrays a bud becoming a beautiful flower and developing a bright future.

“Together, Xiao Xiao and Lei Lei can mean bright dawn leading to the future. I think their names have a very bright image,” she said.

This photo released by Tokyo Zoological Park Society shows giant panda twins, male Xiao Xiao, right, and female Lei Lei, 103 days after they were born at Ueno Zoo in Tokyo Monday, Oct. 4, 2021.
Xiao Xiao, a male giant panda, has a name signifying “the light of dawn turning brighter,” according to Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike.
Tokyo Zoological Park Society via AP

In a short video that Koike played, the siblings in a baby cot cuddled, crawled slowly and went to sleep. “Adorable,” she said, and played the video twice.

Like elsewhere in the world, pandas are hugely popular in Japan. Before deciding their names, Tokyo officials even set up a name selection committee.

Officials from the zoo and the Tokyo government chose the names from more than 190,000 entries sent from around Japan and after consulting with the Giant Panda National Park in China, which owns the pandas.

This photo released by Tokyo Zoological Park Society shows Lei Lei, one of giant panda twins, 103 days after she was born at Ueno Zoo in Tokyo Monday, Oct. 4, 2021.
Lei Lei, a male giant panda, is named after a gorgeous flower blossoming to a promising future, according to Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike.
Tokyo Zoological Park Society via AP

Both of them weigh about 13.2 pounds — nearly 50 times their weight at birth — and are about 2 feet long, according to the zoo.

Koike said the panda cubs are still raised inside the zoo but their debut is expected in January when they turn 6 months, along with their mother panda.

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