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Hogyan mozgósítja Japán a globális szakértelmet az ukrán aknák eltávolítása érdekében

Japán vezető szerepet játszik a globális erőfeszítésekben, hogy segítsen Ukrajnának felépülni a világ egyik legveszélyesebb háborús örökségéből, amelynek során több millió taposóakna került a földekbe.

Együttműködésben a The Government of Japan

BŐVEBBEN : http://hu.euronews.com/2025/11/18/hogyan-mozgositja-japan-a-globalis-szakertelmet-az-ukran-aknak-eltavolitasa-erdekeben

Iratkozzon fel: Az Euronews elérhető 12 nyelven

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00:00After nearly four years of war, Ukraine is the most heavily mine-contaminated country
00:28in the world, with millions of landmines and unexploded weapons scattered over nearly
00:33a quarter of the land. This invisible danger is wrecking lives. More than 900 civilians
00:40have been killed or injured.
00:52In Tokyo, the Japanese government has just hosted the annual Ukraine Mine Action Conference,
00:58globally, Japan is one of the major supporters of Ukraine, having provided $12 billion in
01:05financial aid, equipment and training since 2022.
01:11This conference is an opportunity to coordinate international support, technical, financial
01:16and humanitarian, to accelerate demining in Ukraine. The emphasis is not only on making
01:23the country safer right now, but as an economic gateway to the future.
01:30The Japanese foreign minister said landmines cast a dark shadow over Ukraine's future,
01:36stressed the importance of mine action through international public-private partnerships.
01:41U.S.
01:43U.S.
01:44U.S.
01:46Mr. Motegi outlined a new package, the Ukraine Mine Action Support Initiative, which aims
02:12to boost human resources and technology, integrating mine action into Ukraine's broader recovery.
02:20He also announced a new partnership with Colombia, another country with a history of
02:24landmine contamination, and a financial contribution to the NATO fund that supports
02:29mine action in Ukraine. Ukraine's Deputy Minister of Economy, Environment and Agriculture says the
02:38ongoing conflict makes clearing landmines even more dangerous.
02:43It's really complicated our work, but we're doing it because if we will wait when war will
02:51stop, we 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, which is all about getting
03:07rid of the landmines, but also what comes next.
03:10Nexus idea, it's not doing just clearance, it's a clearance, it's thinking about future
03:16and what will happen in the area in the future after clearance, what will rebuild and in what
03:22time period, how we work with local authorities, how we work with local citizens, with local
03:28business.
03:30Japanese engineering and manufacturing company Niken Corporation has given 12 landmine clearance
03:36machines to Ukraine since the beginning of the conflict.
03:39The modern jetpack is a blue type, which is a blue type.
03:44But this equipment is a shovel type, which is to move the arms and to make the arms and to
03:46move the arms and to make the arms.
04:00Thousands of miles away from the Tokyo conference, the Niken machine is being put through its paces
04:06in a real life simulation here in Cambodia offices from Ukraine's emergency services
04:15are learning how to use the equipment on the ground before heading home where they'll train
04:19up their colleagues in turn coordinated by the Japan international cooperation agency
04:26JICA this training camp pulls together expertise from the Cambodia mine action center and Niken
04:33to pass on knowledge and skills to trainees from the Ukrainian state emergency service
04:39this is one of several training sessions JICA has held in Cambodia a country that knows all too well
04:47the deadly toll that landmines exact
04:50Miini don't use得 very many staunch home
04:52Department of Raise
04:56visit the
05:14the houses, the houses, the buildings they want to sell.
05:18There are also very damaged electric lines,
05:23various infrastructure objects on the occupied territories.
05:31Back in Tokyo at the Ukraine Mine Action Conference,
05:34Kameishi Hiroto of JICA says the training program is two-pronged.
05:39Just simply providing equipment doesn't work well,
05:42because when introducing new technology or new equipment,
05:47that technology and equipment should be properly used,
05:50meaning that capacity development and human resource development is key.
05:53The idea is that the Ukrainian officers in Cambodia
05:57will now train up their colleagues back in the field.
06:00We really hope that those kind of trainers
06:03will be the focal or core of the human resource development in Ukraine.
06:10While efforts in Cambodia aim to prevent future casualties from mines,
06:15the toll in Ukraine is already immense.
06:19With tens of thousands of people there in need of prosthetic limbs,
06:23one Japanese company is exploring how its technology could help.
06:27Obara Kogyo is a fourth-generation Tokyo-based prosthetics company
06:34with more than 70 years of experience.
06:37Obara Kogyo has received inquiries from organizations in Ukraine,
06:43and is considering how best to respond to the evident need for prosthetics,
06:48but in a country where medical facilities are overstretched.
07:01Obara Kogyo has received inquiries from organizations in Ukraine,
07:05and is considering how best to respond to the evident need for prosthetics,
07:10but in a country where medical facilities are overstretched.
07:14We've seen the brute strength of the demining machine in action in Cambodia,
07:27and 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 Padeko,
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.
08:26Then, if one meter, the detector cannot detect anything.
08:32The 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.
08:53This gentleman is askin.
08:56I'm planning to decide to mount a drone using an aluminum drone icem elaborated drone.
09:00The station fragments of iron laptop's area
09:03is make sure przemyיל upside over the ground,
09:08and美しくétais with ODOM.
09:10You can do that, and even check out his arms at wide a distance.
09:11We put it square in the surface and Julie put in the center.
09:16Vlad Kozak of the Ukrainian Foundation Post-Up was in Nagoya.
09:46The 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.
10:10At 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 Russian weight 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.
10:44Every 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 and landmines,
10:55and of course, taste the traditional dish.
10:58And the natural dish.
10:59I think the landmines that are across the country are coming out
11:03as much as I'm trying to do.
11:06And as a result as the landmines that don't have to live without getting
11:09to live, I feel like I don't have to live without being.
11:13And they can be killed by the birds.
11:15I learned how to do it. It was fun.
11:20If there is a forest, we can't do it.
11:24We can't get rid of it and we can't get rid of it.
11:27I'm very happy to see that the forest has been born.
11:39With new agreements signed and fresh partnerships launched,
11:42Japan's role in Ukraine goes beyond funding.
11:45It's a full-scale effort, saving lives
11:48and preparing the ground for recovery and reconstruction.
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