China Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival

Image via Wu Hong/EPA
Image via Wu Hong/EPA
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China Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival

Image via Wu Hong/EPA
Image via Wu Hong/EPA

The Harbin International Snow Festival was launched on Friday with some 180,000 cubic meters of ice and 150,000 cubic meters of snow being used to build 80,000 square meters of the event.

The festival will last for 3 months.

The buildings were covered with colorful lights that attract tourists to the festival.

China takes advantage of winter and its snow and ice to set up the festival which brings up paintings and creative arts.

The temperatures in this city is often 40 degrees Celsius below zero and remains so for almost 3 months.



Lion Cub Cuddles on Offer with Afternoon Tea in China

FILE PHOTO: People walk on a promenade in Shanghai, China, July 10, 2025. REUTERS/Go Nakamura/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People walk on a promenade in Shanghai, China, July 10, 2025. REUTERS/Go Nakamura/File Photo
TT
20

Lion Cub Cuddles on Offer with Afternoon Tea in China

FILE PHOTO: People walk on a promenade in Shanghai, China, July 10, 2025. REUTERS/Go Nakamura/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People walk on a promenade in Shanghai, China, July 10, 2025. REUTERS/Go Nakamura/File Photo

Teatime revels in China now include hugs with lion cubs in a four-course afternoon set offered by a restaurant in the northern province of Shanxi, drawing widespread attention online and fueling concern for the animals' welfare.

Customers cradled the lion cubs as if they were babies in pictures and video clips posted online on China's Wechat and Weibo platforms.

The Wanhui restaurant in Taiyuan city features llamas, turtles and deer in addition to the cubs on its page on Douyin, China's counterpart to social media app TikTok.

Wanhui, which opened in June, sells about 20 tickets a day to customers looking to snuggle with the animals as part of a set menu costing 1,078 yuan ($150), the state-run Shanghai Daily said on its official Wechat page.

"The service has raised serious concerns about legality and animal welfare," the English-language newspaper added.

Reuters was unable to independently contact Wanhui.

Online comments were mostly critical, saying the venture was dangerous and not good for the animals.

"This is for the rich to play," said one Weibo user. "Ordinary people even can't afford to drink."

Another user urged action by the authorities, adding, "The relevant departments should take care of it."

The incident comes just after authorities investigated a hotel in June for offering a "wake-up service" starring red pandas, state media said.

The hotel in the southwestern region of Chongqing allowed the animals to climb onto beds to awaken guests.