Japanese macaques eat cherry blossoms at Tokyo's Ueno
zoological garden, in April 2014 ©Yoshikazu Tsuno (AFP)
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A Japanese zoo
said on Thursday it is rethinking the name of a baby monkey after a public poll
decided on "Charlotte", following complaints it was disrespectful to
Britain's newborn princess.
Mt. Takasaki Wild Monkey Park announced the name
Wednesday after it came top in a vote, a tradition at the zoo for the first
macaque monkey born each year.
"The name was publicly solicited and Charlotte
suddenly became the most popular choice -- with 59 votes out of the total 853
-- after the British baby princess's name was announced," a zoo official
told AFP.
"There was no vote for 'Charlotte' before the
Monday night announcement," he said.
Princess Charlotte Elizabeth Diana was born in London
to Prince William and his wife Kate last week, a younger sister to Prince
George, who is in line to inherit the British throne.
"Since we announced the name we've been receiving
calls and emails from people mostly complaining that it is rude to British
people" to give a monkey the same name as a member of their royal family,
the zoo official said.
"This morning a TV commentator said he thinks it
is alright, but most voices are against the idea," he added.
Kyodo News reported complainants had asked how people
in Japan here would react if a British zoo were to name an animal after a
member of Japan's revered imperial family.
The zoo in southwestern Oita, on the island of Kyushu,
is discussing what to do, the official said, adding they were considering the
option of renaming the baby monkey.
Princess Charlotte's birth caused an outbreak of
patriotic fervour in Britain, where the press and public lauded her names, seen
as a triple homage to her grandfather Prince Charles, great-grandmother Queen
Elizabeth II and William's late mother Diana.
Britain's royals are immensely popular in Japan, where
their easy familiarity with the public stands in marked contrast to the austere
image of the country's own imperial clan.
A
recent visit by Prince William -- who left heavily pregnant Kate at home -- was
followed in minute detail by Japan's media, which revelled in the chance to
show pictures of him dressed as a samurai lord.
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