Meet Jia Jia and De De, Hong Kong's first locally born giant pandas
[May 28, 2025]
By KANIS LEUNG
HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong's first locally born giant pandas have
finally been named and introduced as Jia Jia and De De.
The names of the cubs, affectionately known as “Elder Sister” and
“Little Brother,” were announced Tuesday in a ceremony at Ocean Park,
the theme park housing them, their parents and two other giant pandas
that arrived from mainland China last year.
The names were the winning suggestions from residents in a naming
contest that drew more than 35,700 entries.
The Chinese character “Jia,” from the female cub's name “Jia Jia,”
carries a message of support and features an element of family and a
sense of auspicious grace. The name embodies the prosperity of families
and the nation and the happiness of the people, the park said.
The Chinese character “De," from the male cub's name, means to succeed,
carrying the connotation that Hong Kong is successful in everything. De
also has the same pronunciation as the Chinese character for virtue, the
park said, suggesting giant pandas possess virtues cherished by Chinese
people.
Ocean Park chairman Paulo Pong said they followed tradition by using
Mandarin pronunciation for the pandas’ English names. He said “Jia"
sounds like a word in the Cantonese term for elder sister, while “De De”
sounds a bit like the Cantonese phrase for little brother. Cantonese is
the mother language of many Hong Kongers.

“It's a very positive pair of names,” he said. “We have to be a bit
creative here with the names.”
The cubs, who live with their mom, attracted crowds of visitors on
Tuesday. Jia Jia explored a rock and walked around their area, while De
De climbed a tree.
Visitor Polly Luk, a panda lover with an annual pass to the park, spent
an hour in line to see the cubs.
[to top of second column]
|

Giant panda Ying Ying, left, and her daughter Jia Jia are seen at
their enclosure in Ocean Park in Hong Kong, Tuesday, May 27, 2025.
(AP Photo/Chan Long Hei)
 “I’m so used to their old names.
Even now they have new names, I'll still call them ‘Elder Sister’
and ‘Little Brother’," Luk said.
The twins' birth in August made their mother, Ying Ying, the world’s
oldest first-time panda mom a day before her 19th birthday. Their
popularity among residents, visitors and on social media raised
hopes for a tourism boost in the city, where politicians touted the
commercial opportunities as the “panda economy.”
Observers are watching whether housing six pandas helps the park
revive its business, especially when caring for the animals in
captivity is expensive. Ocean Park recorded a deficit of 71.6
million Hong Kong dollars ($9.2 million) last financial year.
The park recorded a nearly 40% growth in visitor flow and 40%
increase in overall income during a five-day holiday beginning May 1
in mainland China, said Pong, who hopes the growth momentum will
continue through summer, Halloween and Christmas seasons.
Pandas are considered China’s unofficial national mascot. The
country’s giant panda loan program with overseas zoos has long been
seen as a tool of Beijing’s soft-power diplomacy.
___
Associated Press video journalist Alice Fung contributed to this
report.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |