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Wie Japan globales Know-how mobilisiert, um die Landminen in der Ukraine zu räumen

Japan leitet ein globales Vorgehen, um der Ukraine zu helfen, sich von einem der gefährlichsten Hinterlassenschaften des Krieges zu erholen, da Millionen von Landminen ihren Boden kontaminieren.

Mit Unterstützung von The Government of Japan

LESEN SIE MEHR : http://de.euronews.com/2025/11/18/wie-japan-globales-know-how-mobilisiert-um-die-landminen-in-der-ukraine-zu-raumen

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00:00UNTERTITELUNG
00:04UNTERTITELUNG
00:06UNTERTITELUNG
00:08Menschen sind in den Häusern,
00:11Menschen sind in den Häusern,
00:13Menschen sind in den Häusern,
00:15sehr viele Menschen sind in der Ukraine.
00:17Das hat alles verändert,
00:21alles in den Häusern.
00:23Nach knapp vier Jahren der Krieg,
00:25Ukraine ist der größte Minden-Kontamineren Land der Welt,
00:29mit millions von landmines und unexploded weapons
00:32scattered over nearly a quarter of the land.
00:35This invisible danger is wrecking lives.
00:38More than 900 civilians have been killed or injured.
00:53In Tokyo, the Japanese government has just hosted
00:56the annual Ukraine Mine Action Conference.
00:59Globally, Japan is one of the major supporters of Ukraine,
01:03having provided $12 billion in financial aid,
01:06equipment and training since 2022.
01:09This conference is an opportunity to coordinate international support,
01:15technical, financial and humanitarian,
01:18to accelerate demining in Ukraine.
01:21The emphasis is not only on making the country safer right now,
01:25but as an economic gateway to the future.
01:28The Japanese foreign minister said landmines cast a dark shadow over Ukraine's future
01:36and stressed the importance of mine action
01:39through international public-private partnerships.
01:42The U.S.-L.A.
01:44Es ist wichtig,
01:45dass die Ukraine die Sicherheit auf der Erfolge auf die USA
01:48und die Europa gebilder werden,
01:49die die USA gebilder werden,
01:50die die USA gebilder werden,
01:53die die USA gebilder werden.
01:54Die Ukraine-Mine-Mine-Action-Support,
01:55die in der Ukraine-Mine-Action-Support Initiative ist
01:58Das ist ja eine große große необходимоste Prozess.
02:04Mr. Mortegi outlined a new package,
02:08the Ukraine Mine Action Support Initiative,
02:11which aims to boost human resources and technology,
02:15integrating mine action into Ukraine's broader recovery.
02:20He also announced a new partnership with Kolumbia,
02:23another country with a history of landmine contamination
02:26and a financial contribution to the NATO Fund that supports mine action in Ukraine.
02:33Ukraine's Deputy Minister of Economy, Environment and Agriculture
02:37says the ongoing conflict makes clearing landmines even more dangerous.
02:43It's really complicated our work.
02:46But we're doing it because if we will wait when war will stop,
02:52we will lose totally our economy because our economy is, in a big part, it's agriculture, production.
03:01Japan and Ukraine have developed a new approach, the so-called Nexus,
03:06which is all about getting rid of the landmines, but also what comes next.
03:11Nexus idea is not doing just clearance, it's thinking about future
03:16and what will happen in the area in the future after clearance,
03:20what will be rebuilt and in what time period,
03:23how we work with local authorities, how we work with local citizens, with local business.
03:30Japanese engineering and manufacturing company Niken Corporation
03:34has given 12 landmine clearance machines to Ukraine since the beginning of the conflict.
03:40Thousands of miles away from the Tokyo Conference,
04:03the Niken machine is being put through its paces in a real-life simulation.
04:11Here in Cambodia, officers from Ukraine's emergency services
04:14are learning how to use the equipment on the ground
04:17before heading home, where they'll train up their colleagues in turn.
04:22Coordinated by the Japan International Cooperation Agency, JICA,
04:26this training camp pulls together expertise from the Cambodia Mine Action Centre and Niken
04:33to pass on knowledge and skills to trainees from the Ukrainian State Emergency Service.
04:40This is one of several training sessions JICA has held in Cambodia,
04:45a country that knows all too well the deadly toll that landmines exact.
04:50himself in the military.
04:51He was used in the meantime to witness
04:53a lot of much and the buildings of theёт.
04:56The landmines that have been burnt in the area.
04:57There are workers to break up the house and otherkommen.
04:58These farmers are not hablando.
05:00There are many vacancies.
05:00The landingmines that are not being that way of the illegal.
05:02The landmines that have been abandoned.
05:04The landmines that have been abandoned.
05:06But there are also many and more.
05:08There are also inhabitants of the Cityiles.
05:11The landmines that have been abandoned.
05:12The internalmines that have been abandoned.
05:14The buildings that have been abandoned,
05:15and in this area, they have abandoned themselves.
05:16And to ensure other buildings,
05:18Es gibt auch sehr verabschiedene Linien-Elektropöre und verschiedene Infrastruktur-Objekte auf der Ocupung.
05:30Back in Tokio, at the Ukraine Mine Action Conference, Kameishi Hiroto of JICA says the training program is two-pronged.
05:39The idea is that the Ukrainian officers in Cambodia will now train up their colleagues back in the field.
06:09While efforts in Cambodia aim to prevent future casualties from mines, the toll in Ukraine is already immense.
06:19With tens of thousands of people there in need of prosthetic limbs, one Japanese company is exploring how its technology could help.
06:30Obara Kogyo is a fourth-generation Tokyo-based prosthetics company with more than 70 years of experience.
06:37In our company, we use the machine to make a knife in Japanese.
06:44We use the machine to make a knife in Japan.
06:47In the same way, we have a great success of 3D printing technology.
06:52We can connect these new technologies to a speedy and speedy.
06:56We can be able to make a single product.
07:01Obara Kogyo has received enquiries from organisations in Ukraine
07:05in Ukraine, and is considering how best to respond to the evident need for prosthetics
07:10when in a country where medical facilities are overstretched.
07:35We've seen the brute strength of the demining machine in action in Cambodia,
07:39and other technologies are also in development to try and minimize the risks to soldiers on the ground.
07:46Industrial drone company ProDrone is working with Tokyo consultancy Padeco
07:51and two local Ukrainian partners to develop AI-powered drones that can detect mines from the sky.
07:59Someone said to demining in Ukraine takes more than 100 years.
08:04But, well, we didn't calculate, but if this technology can contribute,
08:10then it's going to be much faster and less dangerous.
08:14It is very, very high technology because lower altitude is very difficult to fly,
08:22but our drone can do only 20 centimeters.
08:26The drones use software to map the exact location of where the mines are detected.
08:38The flight path is also programmed so the drones fly autonomously.
08:45Nagoya-based ProDrone is currently testing them at its headquarters
08:49and invited a delegation of Ukrainian companies to watch.
08:53It is a drone who uses an aluminum drone.
08:57The requires a small solution.
08:58The main supply path is a location for its distance.
09:02It helps to fly from the ground on the ground.
09:06And it's a small area.
09:08It helps to compress it into 2 chairs of it as a wall.
09:12It helps the whole area.
09:14We are able to turn them around by and make a long enough space.
09:19Vlad Kozak of the Ukrainian Foundation Post-Up was in Nagoya.
09:49The widespread use of landmines has decimated farming.
09:55Before the war, much of this land was used for agriculture.
09:59Ukraine exported enormous quantities of food.
10:02It was known as the breadbasket of Europe.
10:05And its agriculture sector accounted for around 10% of its GDP.
10:12At a side event during the conference, Ukrainian chef Yevhen Klopotenko
10:16was serving up Ukraine's borscht soup, made from vegetables from fields
10:20recently cleared of landmines to raise awareness.
10:23Three years ago, four years ago, you've been farming all of your life.
10:27And then Russia invaded and mined all the territories.
10:32And then was the time when we pushed the Russian army back.
10:37And now again, we have these fields, but they are mined.
10:40And the farmers, they can only farm.
10:42And that's their craft. Every day they can be killed.
10:45They can be killed by the drone or they can be killed by the mine.
10:48So that's the real price of the food.
10:51It was a moment for local people to find out more about Ukraine
10:54and landmines, and of course, taste the traditional dish.
10:58Now, I will remember that the landmines were Sitky.
10:59I hope the landmines were so much in the day.
11:00Not because of the landmines were so much in the day.
11:01But it's actually exciting.
11:02And it's really interesting if you give up
11:07about the landmines that they could be living the time.
11:11I am not sure that the landmines were so much in the day.
11:15It's a matter of the landmines who were ölchadosch.
11:16Ich wusste, dass es sehr interessant ist.
11:20Wenn man sich die Verlust aufbauen kann,
11:24dann kann man die Verlust aufbauen,
11:26und man weiß, dass die Erde erbaut.
11:28Ich bin sehr glücklich.
11:39Mit neuen Verlust aufbauen,
11:41und neue Partnerschafts aufbauen,
11:43in Ukraine goes beyond funding.
11:46It's a full-scale effort,
11:47saving lives and preparing the ground
11:49for recovery and reconstruction.
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