Relevant offers
Asia
A panda born at Tokyo's Ueno Zoo died on Wednesday of pneumonia, less than a week after its much-awaited birth was greeted with widespread excitement.
The cub was found motionless and without a heartbeat on his mother's belly and moved to an incubator, but efforts to revive the baby panda failed, zoo officials said.
''It appears that when the baby was being breast-fed, it may have inhaled some milk, which caused pneumonia,'' zoo director Toshimitsu Doi told a hastily-called news conference before choking up and wiping his face with a handkerchief.
The panda's mother, Shin Shin, arrived from China in February 2011 with her partner, Ri Ri. The two went on view to the public soon after a devastating earthquake and tsunami the following month, providing Japan with some welcome good news.
Hopes for a baby began after the two pandas were recorded on camera mating earlier this year, and the 7-year-old Shin Shin gave birth on July 5. It was the first panda birth at Ueno Zoo in 24 years.
The baby's growth was followed by the media on a daily basis, with television footage showing the tiny, white-haired cub wriggling in an incubator or being cradled to its mother's chest. Visitors flocked to the zoo.
''We're really saddened by this. That's all we can say,'' said Yutaka Fukuda, the zoo's deputy director.
- Reuters
Sponsored links
Historic Everest climb for Kiwi
Monster tornado slams into Oklahoma city
Bombings kill more than 95 in Iraq
North Korea fires sixth missile in three days
Sunken ships still pose threat
McCully meets with US Secretary of State
Poison victim's parents hope charges close
Hot air balloons collide, two dead
Monster tornado slams into Oklahoma city
Lesbian bed ban sparks threats and abuse
Historic Everest climb for Kiwi
The Doors founding member dies
Kiwi students among the sleepiest in the world
Kiwi entrepreneur buys Melbourne Storm
Yahoo reboots Flickr with terabyte storage
Do you care about sustainability?
Customs seizes elephant meat, dead primate
Have you got an epic man cave?
Monster tornado slams into Oklahoma city
No underwear! Eva's Cannes mishap
Lesbian bed ban sparks threats and abuse
Man who fell to Earth lives to tell the tale
NZ's Ed Hillary 'claimed' by Britain
Aftershocks 'nothing alarming'
Woman tells of alleged multiple rape ordeal
