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13th APEC Tourism Ministerial Meeting opens in Macao

China

China

China

13th APEC Tourism Ministerial Meeting opens in Macao

2026-06-27 17:00 Last Updated At:18:07

The 13th Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Tourism Ministerial Meeting opened on Saturday in the Macao Special Administrative Region (SAR), as part of the "APEC China 2026" program.

The meeting, focusing on digital Innovation and collaboration to leverage tourism for an Asia-Pacific Community, brought together around 200 delegates from 21 APEC member economies and international organizations.

Several officials attending the meeting said connectivity among APEC economies is crucial for promoting tourism and prosperity, and expressed their expectation to strengthen pragmatic cooperation with China.

APEC is the most important economic cooperation mechanism in the Asia-Pacific region. The 33rd APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting will be held in Shenzhen in November 2026, and the Senior Officials' Meeting and APEC Ministerial Meeting will be held in various cities across China.

13th APEC Tourism Ministerial Meeting opens in Macao

13th APEC Tourism Ministerial Meeting opens in Macao

A pair of protected common kestrels have turned an abandoned magpie nest on a telecom tower in Beijing's suburban Changping District into an unlikely nursery, offering a rare glimpse of birds of prey raising chicks in a built-up area.

The kestrels, a wild animal species under the second-class state protection in China, settled on the 30-meter-high tower, drawing birdwatchers and residents in the past few days.

Footage filmed by birdwatchers earlier showed an adult kestrel returning from a hunt and landing near the nest, where several fluffy chicks stretched their necks and flapped their wings as they waited to be fed.

The chicks have since shed their gray down and developed brown streaks and markings. They are now practicing flying.

"I basically come here every day now. It is very interesting to watch kestrels raise their chicks. The male bird is responsible for going out to hunt. Upon returning, he hands the food to the female, who feeds the chicks," said birdwatcher Si Shoujun.

"These are the two parent birds. The one on the left is the male, and the one on this side is the female. Today, I captured both of them in the same frame because the male returned to the nest without food. When the female saw that he came back with nothing, she tried to force him to go out and look for food, because there are still three chicks in the nest waiting for feed," Si explained.

Common kestrels are a relatively common raptor species in Beijing and are often seen in green spaces where vegetation is abundant. But nesting and raising chicks in the city's built-up areas is less common.

Beijing is now home to 531 recorded bird species, according to local authorities.

Protected kestrels turn Beijing telecom tower into unlikely nursery

Protected kestrels turn Beijing telecom tower into unlikely nursery

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