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Supporting Iraqi children with cancer by buying chocolates

Supporting Iraqi children with cancer by buying chocolates

TOKYO, Japan - Minoru Kamata, a doctor and head of the civic group Japan Iraq Medical Network, poses in Tokyo on Jan. 5, 2011 with tins of chocolates that are being sold for a donation charity to help pediatric cancer patients in war-torn Iraq at the group's head office.

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Electric minivehicle for elderly debuts

Electric minivehicle for elderly debuts

TOKYO, Japan - A single-seat electric vehicle for the elderly was unveiled in Tokyo on Oct. 7. Unlike automobiles, the vehicle does not have a foot break or an accelerator pedal. The electric vehicle, measuring 2.2 meters long and 1.2 meters wide, was jointly developed by Minoru Kamata, assistant professor of the University of Tokyo, and a Yokohama-based auto company.

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Japan doctor worried about worsening medical care in Iraq's Kurdish region

Japan doctor worried about worsening medical care in Iraq's Kurdish region

Doctor and author Minoru Kamata talks about deteriorating medical conditions in the Kurdish Autonomous Region in northern Iraq during his report in Tokyo on June 21, 2015, on a recent visit there. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Chocolate tins to raise money for Fukushima, Iraqi kids

Chocolate tins to raise money for Fukushima, Iraqi kids

TOKYO, Japan - Minoru Kamata, 63, chief of Japan Iraq Medical Network, holds tins of chocolates, proceeds from the sales of which will go to children in Fukushima and Iraq, at the group's office in Tokyo on Jan. 5, 2012. (Kyodo)

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Supporting Iraqi children with cancer by buying chocolates

Supporting Iraqi children with cancer by buying chocolates

TOKYO, Japan - Minoru Kamata, a doctor and head of the civic group Japan Iraq Medical Network, poses in Tokyo on Jan. 5, 2011 with tins of chocolates that are being sold for a donation charity to help pediatric cancer patients in war-torn Iraq at the group's head office. (Kyodo)

  •  
Electric minivehicle for elderly debuts

Electric minivehicle for elderly debuts

TOKYO, Japan - A single-seat electric vehicle for the elderly was unveiled in Tokyo on Oct. 7. Unlike automobiles, the vehicle does not have a foot break or an accelerator pedal. The electric vehicle, measuring 2.2 meters long and 1.2 meters wide, was jointly developed by Minoru Kamata, assistant professor of the University of Tokyo, and a Yokohama-based auto company.

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