In photo: The intimate turnover of more than P24M worth of UV-C handy sanitizers from Universal Entertainment Corporation to the Philippine Government through the Department of Health. From left, His Excellency Koshikawa Kazuhiko, Ambassador-designate of Japan to the Philippines, Department of Health’s Undersecretary and Chief of Staff Leopoldo J. Vega, and Kenji Sugiyama, Director of the Board of Okada Manila
Okada Manila’s parent company, Universal Entertainment Corporation (UEC), continues its commitment to help the Philippine government to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic by donating 5,000 units of state-of-the-art UV-C irradiation devices to the Department of Health (DOH).
UEC Chairman, President, CEO, CIO Jun Fujimoto presented sample units of the devices to Philippine Ambassador to Japan Jose C. Laurel V during a courtesy call in November 2020.
The device uses a special technique that kills bacteria and viruses in a short time by irradiating UV-C254nm, which is the wavelength with the strongest bactericidal and inactivating effect. It has the capacity to inactivate 99% of COVID-19 particles in about 0.5 seconds at a distance of 1 centimeter and 40.1 seconds at 30 centimeters.
Each UV-C irradiation device costs around US$100 and the peso value of 5,000 units is more than P24M.The device is made from Japan and is exclusively used by UEC on its premises.
As early as last year, the UEC also extended help to the Philippine government since the start of the pandemic and donated 500,000 pieces of facemasks as part of its countermeasures against the spread of COVID-19.
The formal turnover of donations was held on February 8 at Okada Manila’s Grand Ballroom in an intimate turn over ceremony. Special guests in attendance will be His Excellency Koshikawa Kazuhiko, Ambassador-designate of Japan to the Philippine Embassy of Japan in the Philippines, Kenji Sugiyama, Director of the Board of Okada Manila, and Department of Health’s Undersecretary and Chief of Staff Leopoldo J. Vega.