
Japan firm supporting refugees to donate glasses to war-torn Ukraine
KYODO NEWS - 4 minutes ago - 09:25 | All, Japan
A Japanese company that makes glasses will donate 5,100 pairs of spectacles to people displaced by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Fuji Megane Co., which has been supporting refugees for more than 40 years, will distribute the glasses through the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.
The glasses, which include 1,670 pairs for children, will be given to the beneficiaries following an onsite eye examination.
The Sapporo-based company's dedication to helping refugees stems from the experience of its 82-year-old president, Akio Kanai.
Born in Japan-ruled Sakhalin, Kanai was 2 years old when on Aug. 16, 1945, the day after Japan's surrender in World War II, he, fled to Japan's northern main island of Hokkaido along with his mother and older brother due to an advance by the Soviet military on Sakhalin.
In a recent telephone interview, Kanai said, "I want to support people in Ukraine," citing his experience as an evacuee.
Fuji Megane has supported refugees around the world since 1983, donating a total of 180,000 pairs of glasses to people in countries such as Thailand, Nepal and Azerbaijan.
Kanai became the first Japanese person to receive the Nansen Refugee Award, dubbed the Nobel Prize for refugee support, from the U.N. refugee agency in 2006. The prize honors individuals and groups that have taken extraordinary actions to protect refugees.
Related coverage:
Japan PM throws support behind Ukraine to achieve lasting peace
FEATURE: Ukrainian kids practice sumo free from missile attack fears
Japan to accept 2 from Gaza for medical treatment amid Israel attacks
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Nikkei Asia
an hour ago
- Nikkei Asia
Trump extends deadline for US TikTok sale to September
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday extended to September 17 a deadline for China-based ByteDance to divest the U.S. assets of short-video app TikTok despite a law that mandated a sale or shutdown without significant progress. Trump signed an executive order pushing back Thursday's deadline for 90 more days, a step that he had previously signaled.

Nikkei Asia
2 hours ago
- Nikkei Asia
Trump says he signed order extending TikTok deadline for 90 days
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thursday that he extended the June 19 deadline for China-based ByteDance to divest the U.S. assets of short-video app TikTok for 90 more days. "I've just signed the Executive Order extending the Deadline for the TikTok closing for 90 days (September 17, 2025)," he said in a Truth Social post, which included a copy of the document.


Nikkei Asia
3 hours ago
- Nikkei Asia
Honda and Nissan weigh US tie-up as Trump tariffs spur rapprochement
TOKYO -- Honda Motor is considering a business collaboration with Nissan Motor, four months after the collapse of their merger plans, as U.S. tariffs cloud the prospects of both Japanese automakers. At Honda's annual shareholders meeting Thursday, President Toshihiro Mibe was asked whether the company would consider a merger with Nissan again.