Citizen Philanthropy in Action: The Armenia Giving Network Reflects on a Year of Group Service Learning Activities

Market Screener
Nov 19 2021
11/18/2021 | 05:43pm EST

At VMware, we believe everyone has something unique to contribute to our society. Our culture of service influences the way we interact with others – inside and outside of work. As such, we are all Citizen Philanthropists, empowered to support what is most meaningful to us through VMware Foundation programs. VMware’s culture of service is a key pillar of the equity outcomes of VMware’s 2030 Agenda, as Citizen Philanthropy provides equal access to VMware’s charitable resources for all VMware people around the world.

To bring VMware Foundation programs to life, employee-led groups called Giving Networks inspire VMware colleagues (in their teams, sites, locations, regions, countries, etc.) to take action in their communities. As Giving Network members, people embody VMware’s EPIC2 values and leadership, demonstrating how we can all learn and grow personally and professionally through service.

This month we checked in with Ashot Harutyunyan and Mariam Avagyan, two active members of the Armenia Giving Network, as well as Gohar Avagyan, who is the Giving Network lead, about each of their Service Learning experiences.

Ashot Harutyunyan, Staff Data Scientist:

I spent many of my Service Learning hours this year contributing to the nonprofit academic community in my city. Using my specialized skills, I assisted with preparing scientific meetings that encouraged students and young professionals to engage and grow, as well as build bridges between the university and technology research groups. My 40 hours of Service Learning this year were focused on supporting an examination committee for students training in Artificial Intelligence, as well as volunteering to be a guest editor for a computer science journal. This included reviewing research papers, improvement recommendations of scientific works, and getting the research papers to the level of being selected for a high-quality journal publication. Such activities have already resulted in two special issues of the open-source Journal of Universal Computer Science with three volumes in the past 2-3 years.

“Our culture of service at VMware gives people an exceptional opportunity to accelerate positive changes in the communities we live in. I personally feel joy and pride from my contributions and impact. “

Gohar Avagyan, Office Manager:

When I joined VMware in 2018, I was pleasantly surprised to learn about our Service Learning and Citizen Philanthropy Investment programs, and the fact that each employee has the choice to decide how they want to give back to the community.

“I think the freedom of choice to do Service Learning activities that are close to your heart is something that makes VMware unique in comparison to other companies that I have worked with.”

As the lead of the Armenia Giving Network, I have helped plan many Service Learning events for my team this year, including planting trees, expanding urban green zones, and promoting sustainability efforts, which are all activities that our office is passionate about. I have had opportunities to organize group Service Learning activities for our staff on several occasions, and we usually join local municipality initiatives, but for the latest event, I approached the Armenia Tree Project, a nonprofit that specializes in forestation. Jointly we identified a venue, which was Arayi village in Aragatsotn province of Armenia, a picturesque sight with breathtaking views of Mount Aragats, the highest pick in Armenia, Arayi Mountain, which has a profile of King Ara the Beautiful, and Ararat Mountain! Local residents were interested in setting up a community garden around the small church on the hillside, right at the entrance of the village. Together with my VMware colleagues we planted 350 trees of various types. I strongly believe that all of our actions matter and we can accomplish even more together, so I choose to organize group Service Learning activities and help colleagues get engaged.

Mariam Avagyan, Senior Engineering Manager:

I am a firm believer that education can empower the children of today to become the tech leaders of tomorrow. At Armath Engineering Laboratories, kids aged 10-18 are introduced to science, technology, engineering, and math education through interactive after-school classes, exciting competitions, innovative camps and more.

One of the key components contributing to the success of Armath are the teachers, who commit to learning new technologies and skillsets necessary for educating the kids within Armath labs.

“As part of the VMware family and a member of the Armenia Giving Network, I’m humbled to have the opportunity to share my technical skills by organizing and conducting technical courses along with my colleagues for teachers at Armath.” Our team believes that sharing our professional skills will contribute to the success of the children attending these labs. There are 45 teachers attending our online 2-month courses, who are organized into 9 groups based on their knowledge and language of preference.Read more stories from our #WeAreCitizenPhilanthropists Series by following the hashtag on LinkedIn & Instagram

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VMware Inc. published this content on 18 November 2021 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 18 November 2021 22:42:07 UTC.

Life extension work completed at Armenian NPP

Nuclear Engineering Magazine
Nov 19 2021
18 November 2021
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Upgrading of unit 2 at the Armenian NPP was completed on 16 November. The life of the station was extended until 2026 with the assistance of Rosatom, increasing the level of its safety and efficiency.

The occasion was attended by Rosatom General Director  Alexei Likhachev, who inspected the turbine room and the control room and took part in the award ceremony for the workers at the plant and in the ceremonial planting of trees.

“I am proud that we are participating in a project that helped make Armenia’s nuclear power plant safer and more efficient,” he said. “All of us – a team of professionals consisting of specialists from the Armenian NPP, repair companies, research institutes, design and engineering organizations in Armenia and Russia, as well as manufacturers of equipment for nuclear power plants – have performed a colossal amount of work to replace and modernize equipment. Thanks to the implementation of a whole range of measures, power unit 2 meets the most modern international requirements, and the station will continue to reliably provide electricity to the residents of Armenia.”

On behalf of the Republic of Armenia, Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Gnel Sanosyan took part in the inspection of the plant, on behalf of Haykakan Atomayin Elektrakayan CJSC – General Director of AAEK CJSC Eduard Martirosyan, First Deputy General Director – Director of the Armenian NPP Movses Vardanyan and Chief Engineer of the NPP Artur Grigoryan. The Russian side was represented by General Director of Rusatom Service JSC (the key contractor for modernization at NPPs) Evgeny Salkov, Deputy General Director for Project Management Vladimir Bredov and Head of the Integrated Projects Department Yuri Sviridenko.

Based on the results of studies and inspections carried out by specialists from Rosatom enterprises, the technical parameters of the unit will now allow it to operate for an additional 10 years. “The Armenian NPP plays a decisive role in ensuring the energy security and independence of our country,” said Armenia’s Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures, Gnel Sanosyan. “Without exaggeration, this large-scale project can be called one of the most important in Armenia.  We are not going to stop at this and set new goals for ourselves – this is the extension of the plant’s life after 2026 by 10 years and the further development of the industry – the construction of a new nuclear power plant.”

Construction of a new unit is being planned and considered as it will be needed in 2036, Sanosyan told press conference. He said,   based on rough calculations, this will take 7-8 years. “We can consider 10 years. This means we need to start building the new NPP in 2026 or 2027 so that it can start operating when the life of the current one expires,” he said.

The currently operating Armenian nuclear power plant was built in the 1970s with two Soviet-supplied VVER-440-V230 units, but was closed following a devastating earthquake in 1988. However, unit 2 was recommissioned with Russian help in 1995 following severe energy shortages. In March 2014, the Armenian government decided to extend the plant’s service life to 2026 and it has now been extended until 2036.  Most of the overhaul (until 2019) was funded by an interstate loan from the government of the Russian Federation, the remaining work was carried out at the expense of the budget of Armenia.

Binghamton Armenian Church Celebrates 90 Years

FOX 40, NY
Nov 19 2021
Friday, November 19th 2021, 2:03 PM EST
Updated: 

The Armenian flag is flying over Binghamton City Hall in celebration of the 90th anniversary of St. Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Church. 

The church was founded back in 1931 by Armenian immigrants, many of which Rev. Father Kapriel Mouradjian says fled the Armenian Genocide. The church has been at the same location at 12 Corbett Ave since its inception. 

Families gathered at City Hall on Friday to celebrate the milestone and raise the flag. 

Armenia-Azerbaijan border clash claims casualties, dozens missing

FOX News
Nov 19 2021

A border skirmish between Armenia and Azerbaijan this week resulted in eight deaths and many more wounded before the nations agreed to another cease-fire. 

The Armenian Defense Ministry accused Azerbaijan’s military of opening fire on Armenian positions. Azerbaijan claimed instead that Armenia provoked the conflict. 

The fighting occurred exactly one week after the one-year anniversary of an armistice signed between the neighboring countries and Russia that ended a 44-day war in the region. 

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Armenian officials reported one casualty to Azerbaijan’s seven during the clash, with 13 Armenian troops captured and another two dozen allegedly missing. 

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian pauses as he speaks at the Armenian parliament in Yerevan, Armenia, on Sept. 27, 2020. (Tigran Mehrabyan, Government Press Office, PAN Photo via AP)

Lawmaker Eduard Aghajanyan claimed that 15 Armenian soldiers died, but only one death has been officially confirmed. 

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Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu spoke with his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts to stop the fighting, but it took Russian President Vladimir Putin’s intervention – again – to end the conflict. 

Then-newly elected president of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev smiles as he answers journalists’ questions in Baku, Oct. 18, 2003.  (REUTERS/Gleb Garanich AS/WS)

Moscow brokered the armistice last year in a deal that allowed Azerbaijan to reclaim control over parts of the Nagorno-Karabakh region lost to Armenia in recent conflicts. The two countries have fought for decades over the land, which Azerbaijan originally controlled but in which Armenian people lived. 

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Armenia’s Security Council has called on Russia to help protect the country’s territorial integrity as people fear overtures by Turkey and Azerbaijan. 

“A strong and unequivocal reaction to Azerbaijan’s illegal actions is critical for preventing further major escalations of the security situation in the region and beyond,” Armenian Ambassador Mher Margaryan said during a U.N. Security Council meeting in New York. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

An ongoing issue in the aftermath of the 2020 conflict centers on a number of Armenian detainees and Prisoners of War (POW) who remain in Azeri custody despite an agreement to free all such individuals from both sides. The Armenian government lodged an official case at The Hague over the matter in September. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

Documentary: Nagorno-Karabakh: A Fragile Peace

Arte TV, France
Nov 19 2021

 09/04/2021

In Armenia, the trauma of defeat continues to shake civil society. The human cost of war has been very high for this small country of 3 million inhabitants. More than 10 000 people have been injured and almost 4 000 killed with 1600 soldiers still missing.

Director :

  • Xavier Muntz, Gaspar-Thierry Karoglan

Producer :

  • Frédérique Pittau

Author :

  • Xavier Muntz

Country :

  • France

Year :

  • 2021

WATCH THE FULL DOCUMENTARY AT THE LINK BELOW

​Armenia release their Junior Eurovision 2021 song ‘Qami Qami’

Nov 19 2021

Armenia release their Junior Eurovision 2021 song ‘Qami Qami’


This evening Armenia released their 2021 Junior EurovisionSong Contest entry.

Maléna will sing the song ‘Qami Qami’ in Paris, which means ‘wind, wind’ in Armenian.

Maléna was only confirmed as Armenia’s representative this week and was due to represent the nation at last year’s Junior Eurovision before they withdrew.

Their best Junior Eurovision result was in 2010 when they won the contest.

Junior Eurovision 2021 will take place in Paris on 19 December 2021, after the victory of France’s Valentina last year with ‘J’imagine’.

Armenia and Azerbaijan’s new-old border war

Al-Jazeera, Qatar
Nov 19 2021

Baku and Yerevan have again clashed over the control of frontiers defined by Soviet cartographers, raising fears of conflict.

Last year’s Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia killed more than 6,000 people on both sides [File: Reuters]

Since the early summer, the mobile phones of Armenian and Azerbaijani military combatants have provided partial but dramatic accounts of a new and evolving confrontation between the two countries.

Back in May, soldiers filmed themselves overrunning enemy outposts shouting in broken Russian at their opponents to leave, orchestrated with kicks to backsides, punches or volleys from assault rifles fired into the air.

In picturesque alpine meadows, platoons of Armenian and Azeri troops faced off, often just a few metres apart. It was a tinderbox that burst into flames on the afternoon of November 16.

While there is no independently verifiable information, military sources and local media reported a full-scale battle for several hours along a stretch of border between Azerbaijan and Armenia on or near Mount Ishkhanasar.

Both sides have reported casualties; Armenia said at least six soldiers were killed, while Azerbaijan announced the deaths of at least seven troops.

Mobile footage shows an Azerbaijani artillery unit bombarding Armenian positions. Armenia’s Ministry of Defence released a video of Azerbaijani armoured vehicles being struck by guided weapons.

Harrowing video shot at night in a blizzard appears to show Azerbaijani soldiers beating uniformed Armenian regulars on the ground.

This is Armenia and Azerbaijan’s new conflict: for control of disputed borders defined by Soviet cartographers.

Until the last year’s war over the Nagorno-Karabakh region, those borders were buffered by territories inside Azerbaijan under de facto Armenian control since the 1990s.

But with Azerbaijan’s military victory and the recapturing of almost all of its lost territories, the border areas between Armenia’s Syunik and Gegharkunik provinces, and Azerbaijan’s newly established East Zangezur region have become militarised front lines.

Olesya Vartanyan, a senior analyst with the Brussels-headquartered International Crisis Group, said that in the mountainous terrain, both armies are keen to establish positions on the best available ground.

“The current daily problem is that troops of opposite sides do not have communication with each other. The same is between Azerbaijani and Armenian Joint Staffs. When one side observes several big trucks with soldiers, he right away suspects possible preparations for an assault. There is no way to check before starting an attack.”

Syunik Province separates Azerbaijan from its exclave, the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic, in some places by less than 40km (25 miles).

Crucially, roads that connect Armenian towns and villages in Syunik run through Azerbaijani territory, and here Azerbaijani forces have established checkpoints.

Armenia’s Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan has accused Azerbaijan of a deliberate policy of isolation, describing the nearly impassible alternative routes villagers have been forced to take. School children and teachers have been unable to get to school.

“The blockade of the Goris-Kapan road or the so-called Azerbaijani border and customs checkpoints will cause violations of the rights of the civilian population and severe humanitarian issues, including the isolation of a number of civilian communities,” Tatoyan told Armenian media.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a decades-old dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh [File: Artem Mikryukov/Reuters]

While Azerbaijan maintains that Armenia provoked the latest fighting, geolocation of some of the footage recorded since Tuesday strongly indicates incursions by Azerbaijani armed forces inside Armenia proper.

Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan claimed on Tuesday that since May, 41 square kilometres (15 square miles) of sovereign Armenian territory have been seized by Azerbaijan in the border areas.

Azerbaijan may have a strategy: to pressure Armenia to conclude negotiations following last year’s ceasefire agreement over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Those terms included a commitment by Armenia to allow “unobstructed access” between the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic and Azerbaijan.

Fuad Shahbaz, a military analyst from Baku, says the latest fighting is a result of those negotiations failing to achieve their objectives, including the demarcation of the borders.

“Yerevan is not ready for concessions on a transit route and I guess Baku lost patience. It was hoping to resolve the issue before the winter during a planned November meeting in Moscow which was postponed.”

While Shahbaz believes the opening of a route to Nakhchivan would benefit both Azerbaijan and Armenia by linking up with Turkey, for many Armenians it poses a direct threat to Armenian statehood.

“The Azerbaijan strategic goal is to establish at least de facto control over Syunik province,” says Benyamin Poghosyan, a Yerevan-based political scientist. “President Aliyev of Azerbaijan has stated many times publicly that Syunik province artificially separates the Turkic world spanning from Istanbul to Kazakhstan.”

Russia’s military presence in Armenia is supposed to guarantee Armenian security, and Russian boots on the ground in Karabakh are helping to maintain a fragile peace, albeit with occasional outbreaks of localised violence.

So far, Armenia has not officially requested Russian military intervention as part of its Collective Security Treaty with Moscow. But Moscow can exert influence in a way that no other mediator can.

“It is the only regional power with an actual military presence on the ground and a serious political say with leaders in both capitals. So it’s no surprise that Moscow is succeeding. Especially where the OSCE Minsk Group has been struggling to renew its functions,” said Vartanyan.

Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan, even by Armenia, but is populated and until recently was controlled by ethnic Armenians [File: Reuters]

The so-called Minsk Group is co-chaired by Russia, France and the United States and was established in 1994 after the first Karabakh war to work for a permanent peace between Armenian and Azerbaijan.

“Only recently the co-chairs found a way to propose an agenda and a format that can satisfy both sides. But they still have a long way to go before conversations that can lead to real change.”

An intervention by Russia’s Defence Minister Sergey Shoigu led to a cessation in the fighting on November 16.

For the time being, the guns are silent.

 

Trilateral meeting on Nagorno-Karabakh to take place, but consensus is needed, Lavrov says

TASS, Russia
Nov 19 2021
On November 16, hostilities sparked between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces in the Syunik Province of Armenia

MOSCOW, November 19. /TASS/. A trilateral meeting between Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan on Nagorno-Karabakh will happen, but it requires a trilateral consensus, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said at a press conference Friday.

“A meeting will require a consensus, so that all who plan to meet agreed with it. I am certain that such meeting will take place,” he said.

Earlier, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that no contacts between Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Nagorno-Karabakh have been planned yet, adding that agreement and readiness of all sides are necessary for a trilateral contact.

On November 16, hostilities sparked between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces in the Syunik Province of Armenia. In regards to these events, Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu had phone talks with his counterparts from both republics. Russian Defense Ministry said later that both republics took measures to stabilize the situation at the border.

Karabakh building new reservoir, pipeline towards Stepanakert

PanArmenian, Armenia
Nov 19 2021

PanARMENIAN.Net – The construction of a 22 km pipeline taking water from the Patara River in Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) to the capital of Stepanakert is underway, the President’s office has revealed, according to CivilNet.

The project is set to be completed in July 2022. Also, a reservoir will be built on the river by 2025, given that the Artsakh Water Committee has already ordered documents to determine the design and estimated cost.

In the summer, a number of districts of Stepanakert were left without water due to the drought, that’s why the construction of the pipeline connecting the Patara River to the water supply system of the capital has become urgent.

Artsakh also lost most of its energy capacity in the war unleashed by Azerbaijan in fall 2020. Now Karabakh is forced to import electricity, whereas prior to the war, the country was an energy exporter.

33 MEPs call on EU to urge Azerbaijan to withdraw forces from Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
Nov 19 2021

At the initiative of the Member of the European Parliament (MEP) Loucas Fourlas, 33 MEPs addressed a letter to the EU High Representative Josep Borrell, concerning the attack of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces on the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia on November 16, the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy (EAFJD) reports.

The MEPs condemn Azerbaijan’s aggression. They demand, that the Azerbaijani armed forces immediately and completely withdraw from the territory of the Republic of Armenia and are urge the EU External Action Service to put pressure on Azerbaijan to stop and prevent the violation of the territorial integrity of Armenia.

The President of the EAFJD Kaspar Karampetian welcomes the letter by the MEP’s. He states: “Unlike the EEAS’s declaration, the letter of the MEP’s clearly calls the aggressor by its name. The EU needs to put pressure on Azerbaijan with concrete measures, in order to ensure the immediate and complete removal of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces from the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia.’’

The letter of the MEPs reads as follows: ‘’On November 16, the Armed Forces of Azerbaijan launched an attack in along the eastern border of the Republic of Armenia. As Members of the European Parliament, we condemn the Azerbaijani attack and infiltration into the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia which violates the ceasefire statement of the 9. November 2020 and seriously jeopardizes the fragile peace in the region. The Azerbaijani armed forces must immediately and completely withdraw from the territory of the Republic of Armenia.

We deeply regret the reported human losses as a result of the attack. Any action or rhetoric aimed at undermining the security, the peaceful, normal life and the human rights of the population in the eastern and southern regions of the Republic of Armenia must immediately stop.

We call on the EU External Action Service to use all of its leverage to stop and prevent the violation of the territorial integrity of the Republic of Armenia as well as belligerent rhetoric.”