Jack Ma donates 1 million masks to virus-hit Japan
Share - WeChat
One of China's richest men, internet guru Jack Ma, co-founder of Hangzhou-based e-commerce giant Alibaba, has donated 1 million facial masks to Japan in return for the generous help Japan gave China when the country was hit severely by novel coronavirus 20 days ago.
The Jack Ma Foundation and Alibaba Foundation announced on Monday that the masks will be donated to Japan to help alleviate suffering in the epidemic.
"Like the mountain range that stretches before you and me, let's share the same trials and hardships together. We hope everything will get better soon," Jack said through his Weibo account, citing an old Chinese poem.
The masks, weighing 49.4 tons, were transported by China Eastern Airlines and arrived in Tokyo on Tuesday.
- New policies, measures bring reassurance to Taiwan youth
- Remains of 12 Chinese martyrs in Korean War returned to homeland from ROK
- Remains of the 13th batch of CPV martyrs set to return to China
- China steps up efforts in field observation to protect grassland ecology
- China advances flood control, disaster relief efforts in key southern regions
- Chinese engineers plan to study building greenhouse on lunar surface
































