Beijing deploys monkeys, falcons for war parade
BEIJING: China’s air force has called monkeys and falcons into service to ensure safe skies for a huge military parade this week to mark Japan’s defeat in World War II, reports said.Almost 200 aircraft will take part on Thursday in commemorations for the 70th anniversary of what Beijing calls the
By our correspondents
September 01, 2015
BEIJING: China’s air force has called monkeys and falcons into service to ensure safe skies for a huge military parade this week to mark Japan’s defeat in World War II, reports said.
Almost 200 aircraft will take part on Thursday in commemorations for the 70th anniversary of what Beijing calls the “Chinese People’s War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War”.
The animals have been deployed at an air force base involved in the parade, which officer Wang Mingzhi said was in a bird migration corridor — with 400 to 500 species present — potentially affecting aircraft safety.
Pictures on news portal Sina showed a macaque on a red leash standing on its hind legs and mimicking the salute of an officer in a camouflage uniform beside it.
The monkeys had “mastered” the skills to destroy bird nests, Wang was quoted as saying.
“There is no problem doing this,” he said in the report posted on Sunday, adding that they had “graduated” after being trained for one month.
The animals take twigs out of nests one by one before shaking the remaining parts down from the tree, Sina said, adding the whole process takes only about a minute.
Almost 200 aircraft will take part on Thursday in commemorations for the 70th anniversary of what Beijing calls the “Chinese People’s War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War”.
The animals have been deployed at an air force base involved in the parade, which officer Wang Mingzhi said was in a bird migration corridor — with 400 to 500 species present — potentially affecting aircraft safety.
Pictures on news portal Sina showed a macaque on a red leash standing on its hind legs and mimicking the salute of an officer in a camouflage uniform beside it.
The monkeys had “mastered” the skills to destroy bird nests, Wang was quoted as saying.
“There is no problem doing this,” he said in the report posted on Sunday, adding that they had “graduated” after being trained for one month.
The animals take twigs out of nests one by one before shaking the remaining parts down from the tree, Sina said, adding the whole process takes only about a minute.
-
All You Need To Know Guide To Rosacea -
Princess Diana's Brother 'handed Over' Althorp House To Marion And Her Family -
Trump Mobile T1 Phone Resurfaces With New Specs, Higher Price -
Factory Explosion In North China Leaves Eight Dead -
Blac Chyna Opens Up About Her Kids: ‘Disturb Their Inner Child' -
Winter Olympics 2026: Milan Protestors Rally Against The Games As Environmentally, Economically ‘unsustainable’ -
How Long Is The Super Bowl? Average Game Time And Halftime Show Explained -
Natasha Bure Makes Stunning Confession About Her Marriage To Bradley Steven Perry -
ChatGPT Caricature Prompts Are Going Viral. Here’s List You Must Try -
James Pearce Jr. Arrested In Florida After Alleged Domestic Dispute, Falcons Respond -
Cavaliers Vs Kings: James Harden Shines Late In Cleveland Debut Win -
2026 Winter Olympics Snowboarding: Su Yiming Wins Bronze And Completes Medal Set -
Trump Hosts Honduran President Nasry Asfura At Mar-a-Lago To Discuss Trade, Security -
Cuba-Canada Travel Advisory Raises Concerns As Visitor Numbers Decline -
Anthropic Buys 'Super Bowl' Ads To Slam OpenAI’s ChatGPT Ad Strategy -
Prevent Cancer With These Simple Lifestyle Changes