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Japan told them not to go, but they’re in Ukraine fighting Russia anyway: ‘they’re very motivated’

  • One is a former yakuza, while another says he’s a ‘worthless person’ who quit his job as a mahjong parlour manager to join the fight and prove himself
  • Japan’s government, like those elsewhere, has warned its citizens against travel to Ukraine. But a small determined group chose to ignore that advice

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Soldiers fighting for Ukraine fire a rocket towards Russian positions near the front line in the Zaporizhzhia region on Sunday. A handful of Japanese men have defied their government’s warnings and joined Ukrainians battling the Russian invasion. Photo: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty via Reuters
Agence France-Presse
Yuya Motomura, a mahjong parlour manager in Japan, had always wanted a way to prove himself to a society he felt looked down on him. Then Russia invaded Ukraine.

The 45-year-old is one of a handful of Japanese men who have joined Ukrainians battling the Russian invasion, defying their government’s warnings and bucking a decades-long national principle of pacifism.

Japan’s military is constitutionally limited to defence and has not fought since World War II.

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Still, Motomura said he was immediately captivated by the idea of fighting in Ukraine when he saw President Volodymyr Zelensky talking about “defending our independence, our country”.

Yuya Motomura holds up a camouflage jacket at his mahjong parlour in Japan earlier this year before his departure for Ukraine. Photo: AFP
Yuya Motomura holds up a camouflage jacket at his mahjong parlour in Japan earlier this year before his departure for Ukraine. Photo: AFP

“I’ve always felt that I’m someone who is more socially conscious than other people realise,” he said as he prepared to leave Japan for the conflict.

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