Energising Schools : A Case Study in Armenia, September 2021

Relief Web
Sept 20 2021
20 Sep 2021

 

Originally published
20 Sep 2021

 

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According to the WFP’s food security and vulnerability assessment in December 2020, about 20 percent of households with school children were food insecure in Armenia, a slightly higher level than those without school children. The country’s relatively strong agricultural performance since 2001 has resulted in substantially increasing self-sufficiency levels of main food products and overall food availability. However, this availability highly depends on food imports. The country still imports 50.5 percent of the supplied wheat, as well as much of its legumes, poultry, pork, and 92 percent of vegetable oil.

This reveals the vulnerability of the country’s population to foreign food markets and food price fluctuations. The country is also characterised by high levels of poverty, inequality and unemployment. Considerable differences in food security are linked to vulnerable groups or particularly fragile regions. Production costs and postharvest losses are still high, while mechanisation levels and coverage of land used for agriculture are low.
The Arpi community is particularly vulnerable compared with the rest of the country. Schools are connected to the national electricity and gas grids but struggle to pay bills for cooking and heating. Local dairy and poultry farmers, on the other hand, are faced with high energy costs that limit farmers’ ability to increase production. In turn, high production costs make it difficult to compete with market prices against larger producers.

Howell dentist inspired to give back by grandmother’s survival after Armenian genocide

Livingston Daily
Sept 13 2021
Jennifer Timar

Livingston Daily


Howell dentist Shant Bedikian knows how food insecurity impacts a family. His own family escaped genocide and religious oppression in the Middle East. Access to nutritious food was not a given.

His grandmother Azadouhi Bedikian was a survivor of the Armenian genocide by the Ottoman Empire, which occurred between 1915 and 1916. 

One night when Azadouhi was just a girl, Turkish soldiers massacred most of her family, Bedikian said. The Armenian genocide during the WWI era involved mass killings, deportations and forced assimilation of Christians into Muslim Turkish culture.

Azadouhi and two of her younger siblings were the only ones to survive the massacre of their family and many of their neighbors, he said. 

"The kids ended up in orphanages," Bedikian said. 

He said were it not for the Near East Foundation, which formed in 1915 in response to atrocities committed against Armenians and Assyrians in the Ottoman Empire, his family would not be thriving today. His grandmother ended up in Syria.

"If it wasn't for groups like missionaries who supplied food and water, then I don't know."

The family is Armenian Orthodox, a denomination of Christianity. Before the massacre, Bedikian's family members were pharmacists.

"Grandma met Grandpa in Syria," he said. "Then they went to Lebanon and then France."

His family began immigrating to the U.S. in the 1970s, beginning with Bedikian's uncle. 

"When my dad came here he had $1 to his name. They had to build their American dream."

His mother's side of the family also left the Middle East.

"Mom is from Iraq. Part of it was the Iranian Islamic revolution," Bedikian said. "They thought it would hit multiple countries and left."

Bedikian, 40, grew up in Southfield and Birmingham. He is raising his family in Novi. He graduated from dental school at New York University in 2007 and started his dental career working for a hospital. He worked at Bright Side Dental locations for a few years, most recently in Sterling Heights. 

Earlier this year, his dream manifested. He opened his own dental practice, Sincere Smiles Dental, at 1070 W. Highland Road/M-59 in Howell.

While he is living the American dream, he does not take food security for granted.

"Growing up, food was, you better finish your plate. The dinner table is sacred."

On Thursday, Bedikian was among about seven volunteers at a Gleaners Community Food Bank food drive at Fowlerville High School. 

For every new dental patient he sees, Bedikian donates 12 gallons of milk to Gleaners's M.I.L.K Movement, which stands for Making Investments in the Lives of Kids.

Milk he donated was among the food items distributed at the drive. People also picked up other foods, including frozen chicken, vegetables, juice, canned goods and dry goods. 

Bedikian said he learned the M.I.L.K. Movement was underfunded and needed a committed donor. 

"Food security is big for us. My family was immigrating to multiple counties," he said.  "My wife emigrated from Iraq, and it's important to us. Providing food is one less thing for people to worry about."

Ideal Practices, which helps dentists open new firms, also has a program that helps people start businesses in impoverished countries overseas, many in Africa. 

"For every practice that opens in the U.S., they help people start up a business in another country," Bedikian said.

He said he also donates to Aid Beyond Borders, a charity that provides aid to Armenian villages, including people displaced by last year's Nagorno-Karabakh conflict over a disputed region in Azerbaijan.

Emily Hamilton, a community partnership specialist for Gleaners, said upwards of 100 families receive groceries at each of their food drives. They hold food drives around the county, including in four school districts — Fowlerville, Howell, Hartland and Pinckney — and usually get a minimum of 30 families within a two-hour time frame. 

"In 2019, data was telling us in Livingston County food insecurity was at 9%, but we knew that was not the case anymore because we were seeing it at our food panties and mobiles," Hamilton said. 

She said Feeding America released projections for 2021, which estimate food insecurity in the county rose to 10.3%. 

"That is about 19,500 people," Hamilton said. "It's staggering because we don't think of that here. I think people think, not here."

Amy Verhelle-Smith is the food nutrition director at Fowlerville Community Schools. 

Verhelle-Smith said Fowlerville schoolchildren have benefitted from free school meals for breakfast and lunch, but there is still a great need for healthy groceries.

Gleaners food drives are open to anyone in need and promoted by participating school districts and senior centers.

First doses donated by Belgium through COVAX arrive in Armenia

Relief Web
Sept 6 2021
Format
News and Press Release

 

Source
  • GAVI
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Posted
6 Sep 2021

 

Originally published
6 Sep 2021

 

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  • As part of its pledge to deliver 4 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines, the first doses donated by Belgium have been delivered to Armenia.
  • Meryame Kitir, Minister of Development Cooperation and Major Cities Policy: “The only way to defeat this pandemic is through international cooperation. This week, Belgium shares 187,200 AstraZeneca doses with Armenia through COVAX vaccine sharing mechanism. No one is safe until everyone is safe.”
  • Dr Seth Berkley, CEO, Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance: “Sharing doses with COVAX now represents the single most effective intervention a country can make in terms of halting the circulation of the virus and we are grateful to the Belgian government and the Belgian people for their continued support.”

Geneva, 6 September 2021 – The first deliveries from a pledge of 4 million doses to be donated to COVAX by The Belgian Development Cooperation have arrived, with 187,200 doses of the AstraZeneca (AZ) vaccine shipped to Armenia on 5 September. Belgium is donating doses to COVAX on top of the USD 5 million it has pledged to the Gavi COVAX Advance Market Commitment (Gavi COVAX AMC).

This donation by Belgium allows COVAX to deliver more vaccines in the third quarter of this year, before supply from COVAX purchase agreements increases in Q4, meaning that more people will be able to access vaccines now, at a time when variants are a major threat to global health and stability.

“Sharing doses with COVAX now represents the single most effective intervention a country can make in terms of halting the circulation of the virus.” said Dr Seth Berkley, CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, which leads on procurement and delivery at scale for COVAX. “These deliveries to countries enable COVAX to reach some of those in need of protection, and we are grateful to the Belgian government and the Belgian people for their continued support.”

“The only way to defeat this pandemic is through international cooperation. This week, Belgium shares 187,200 AstraZeneca doses with Armenia through COVAX vaccine sharing mechanism. No one is safe until everyone is safe,” said Meryame Kitir, Minister of Development Cooperation and Major Cities Policy.

These doses donated by Belgium are produced by the AstraZeneca manufacturing network. Donating through COVAX helps to increase vaccine coverage, ensures that no dose goes to waste, and helps to bring an end to the acute phase of the pandemic. The design and operationalization of the COVAX dose sharing mechanism is being supported by a contribution of CAD 5 million from Canada.

The donation of doses via COVAX are enabled via tripartite agreements between Gavi, manufacturers, and donating countries. The shipments to countries will be enabled by COVAX delivery partners UNICEF and the Pan American Health Organisation (PAHO).

Over 600 million doses have already been pledged to COVAX by a number of countries in response to short-term supply challenges and the rise of new variants. Working with donor governments to operationalise growing numbers of dose-sharing pledges, COVAX expects to see more deliveries of donated doses in the weeks and months to come.

Notes to editors

About COVAX

COVAX, the vaccines pillar of the Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator, is co-led by CEPI, Gavi and WHO – working in partnership with UNICEF and PAHO as delivery partners, developed and developing country vaccine manufacturers, the World Bank, and others. It is the only global initiative that is working with governments and manufacturers to ensure COVID-19 vaccines are available worldwide to both high-income and lower-income countries.

About Gavi’s role in COVAX

Gavi leads on procurement and delivery at scale for COVAX: designing and managing the COVAX Facility and the Gavi COVAX AMC and working with its traditional Alliance partners UNICEF and WHO, along with governments, on country readiness and delivery. As part of this role, Gavi hosts the Office of the COVAX Facility to coordinate the operation and governance of the mechanism as a whole, holds financial and legal relationships with 193 Facility participants, and manages the COVAX Facility deals portfolio: negotiating advance purchase agreements with manufacturers of promising vaccine candidates to secure doses on behalf of all COVAX Facility participants. Gavi also coordinates design, operationalisation and fundraising for the Gavi COVAX AMC, the mechanism that provides access to donor-funded doses of vaccine to 92 lower-income economies. As part of this work, Gavi provides funding and oversight for UNICEF procurement and delivery of vaccines to all AMC participants – operationalising the advance purchase agreements between Gavi and manufacturers – as well as support for partners’ and governments work on readiness and delivery. This includes tailored support to governments, UNICEF, WHO and other partners for cold chain equipment, technical assistance, syringes, vehicles, and other aspects of the vastly complex logistical operation for delivery. Gavi also co-designed, raises funds for and supports the operationalisation of the AMC’s no fault compensation mechanism as well as the COVAX Humanitarian Buffer.

About Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance

Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance is a public-private partnership that helps vaccinate half the world’s children against some of the world’s deadliest diseases. Since its inception in 2000, Gavi has helped to immunise a whole generation – over 822 million children – and prevented more than 14 million deaths, helping to halve child mortality in 73 lower-income countries. Gavi also plays a key role in improving global health security by supporting health systems as well as funding global stockpiles for Ebola, cholera, meningitis and yellow fever vaccines. After two decades of progress, Gavi is now focused on protecting the next generation and reaching the unvaccinated children still being left behind, employing innovative finance and the latest technology – from drones to biometrics – to save millions more lives, prevent outbreaks before they can spread and help countries on the road to self-sufficiency. Learn more at www.gavi.org and connect with us on Facebook and Twitter.

The Vaccine Alliance brings together developing country and donor governments, the World Health Organization, UNICEF, the World Bank, the vaccine industry, technical agencies, civil society, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and other private sector partners. View the full list of donor governments and other leading organizations that fund Gavi’s work here.

MEDIA CONTACTS

Evan O’Connell
+41 79 682 18 95
[email protected]

Laura Shevlin
+ 41 79 529 92 87
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Meg Sharafudeen
+41 79 711 55 54
[email protected]

Cirũ Kariũki
+41 79 913 94 41
[email protected]

Iryna Mazur
+41 79 429 3671

https://reliefweb.int/report/armenia/first-doses-donated-belgium-through-covax-arrive-armenia

​The Netherlands ready to assist Armenia in the implementation of judicial reforms

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 6 2021

The Netherlands ready to assist Armenia in the implementation of judicial reforms

 September 6, 2021, 13:23 1 minute read

The Kingdom of the Netherlands is ready to assist Armenia in the implementation of judicial reforms.

The issues of Armenia-Netherlands cooperation were discussed today by the Minister of Justice Karen Andreasyan and the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to Armenia Nico Schermers.

The Ambassador was briefed on the priorities of the Ministry, and emphasizing that the Netherlands is open for all proposals.

Karen Andreasyan presented the five big dreams related to the sphere of justice, aimed at the improvement of the Constitution, reforms, in the penitentiary and probation systems, improvement of the judicial system through the examination of morals, reforms in the sphere of compulsory execution, digitalization of the judicial system.

In this context, the Minister noted that the spheres are large, noting that it will be difficult to implement the reforms in that direction without the support of international partners.

Ambassador Schermers expressed the readiness of the Netherlands to deepen cooperation in a number of areas.

​US encourages reengagement in substantive negotiations on Karabakh: Blinken congratulates Mirzoyan on appointment

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 4 2021

US encourages reengagement in substantive negotiations on Karabakh: Blinken congratulates Mirzoyan on appointment

 September 4, 2021, 11:34 1 minute read

The US encourages reengagement in substantive negotiations under the auspices of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs as soon as possible, US Secretary of State Antony Blinkern said in a congratulatory message to Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan.

“I warmly congratulate you on your appointment as foreign minister.  The United States has a longstanding commitment to supporting the Armenian people’s democratic aspirations, and we look forward to cooperating with you to forge stronger bilateral ties based on our shared democratic values,” Secretary Blinken said.                                

“As a co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, we remain committed to working with  you to support a comprehensive and sustainable political settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.  We encourage reengagement in substantive negotiations under the auspices of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs as soon as possible,” he added.

“The United States is a partner in your government’s efforts to strengthen the rule of law, combat corruption, and bolster democratic institutions, while respecting human rights and fundamental  freedoms.  The U.S. Embassy team in Yerevan is ready to assist you and your government maintain robust ties between our two countries.  Together, we can advance our joint interests in Armenia’s sovereign,  democratic, peaceful, and prosperous future,” the Secretary of State said.  

US encourages reengagement in substantive negotiations on Karabakh: Blinken congratulates Mirzoyan on appointment – Public Radio of Armenia ()

Armenian scientists eye development of 5th generation warfare armaments

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 14:26, 2 September, 2021

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian Ministry of High-Tech Industry has set an objective to maximally support the military arsenal with new ideas, Minister Vahagn Khachatryan told reporters. 

“This work is being done, the problem is that the demands are very big.  Very large volumes are required for our army’s demands. Our current industrial possibilities do not enable us with his capacity. This is why we have to make procurements abroad, but we are maximally supporting domestic industries so that they are able to support the military in this matter,” the Minister of High-Tech Industry Vahagn Khachatryan told reporters after the Cabinet meeting.

Khachatryan elaborated that they are focused on 5th generation armaments. “Our main approach is to try and make a step beyond what we had yesterday, which was even then considered to be advanced. We have set this objective before our scientists.”

 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Asbarez: Aliyev Says Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Does Not Exist

President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan, once again, traveled to occupied Shushi where he continued his threats against Armenians, this time saying that the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic does not exist.

He and his wife, Mehriban Aliyeva, visited Shushi to inaugurate a cultural center dedicated to an Azerbaijani poet.

Aliyev laid out plans for the redevelopment of the occupied Artsakh city, saying that five-star hotels and residential complexes were scheduled to be constructed.

“The hated enemy,” Aliyev said, referring to Armenians, “was building the so-called parliament of the self-styled ‘Nagorno-Karabakh Republic’ there,” Aliyev said. “This was intended to antagonize us. The foundation of that building had already been laid and stonework was already been completed. By my order, this devil’s lair was destroyed.”

Aliyev promised those in attendance that next year the 270th anniversary of the city will be celebrated in Shushi, which he called the “cradle of Azerbaijan.”

In reality, Shushi is an Armenian city whose history spans centuries and was known as the cultural capital of historic Armenia.

Relatives of Armenian POWs gather near parliament building, demand inclusion of captives’ issue in agenda

News.am, Armenia
Aug 2 2021

The relatives of Armenian prisoners of war detained in Azerbaijan today gathered near the National Assembly with the demand that the return of the prisoners of war be included in the parliament’s agenda.

“We knew about the first session of the eighth convocation of the National Assembly and came here to call on including the issue of the prisoners of war in the agenda. All Armenian prisoners of war need to be hastily returned to Armenia through the deputies’ active efforts. Security and the return of Armenian prisoners of war to the homeland are the two major issues at this moment,” one of the relatives said, adding that they urge the National Assembly to work harder to ensure the captives’ return.

As far as the seventh convocation of the National Assembly is concerned, the relative stated that he can’t say that the deputies of the seventh convocation didn’t do anything at all, adding that there were deputies who were working day and night to solve he issue, and there were other deputies who were completely clueless.

Turkish press: Armenia seeks greater Russian presence on Azerbaijan border

A member of the Russian peacekeeping troops walks by a tank near the border with Armenia, in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan, Nov. 10, 2020. (Reuters Photo)

Armenia has reiterated its request for Russian military support. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Thursday proposed that Russian border forces be stationed along the length of its border with Azerbaijan amid rising tensions between Yerevan and Baku, the TASS news agency reported.

Armenia and Azerbaijan accused each other earlier on Thursday of flouting a Russian-backed cease-fire that both sides had accepted the previous day to halt deadly clashes over their joint border, which Yerevan wants to be demarcated.

"Given the current situation, I think it makes sense to consider the question of stationing outposts of Russian border guards along the entire length of the Armenian-Azeri border," Pashinian was quoted as saying at a government meeting.

He said that Yerevan was preparing to discuss that proposal with Moscow and that the move would allow work to be carried out on the demarcation and delimitation of the border without the risk of military clashes.

Armenia's Defense Ministry said earlier that Azeri troops had opened fire on Armenian positions at the Gegharkunik section of the border in the early hours of Thursday morning, prompting Armenia to return fire.

Azerbaijan's Defense Ministry said that Armenian forces had opened fire with machine guns and grenade launchers in the direction of a village in the Kelbajar region, and had thrown hand grenades. It said its forces returned fire in a statement.

The cease-fire was called on Wednesday after one of the deadliest border incidents since last year's six-week war between Armenian forces and Baku over the Nagorno-Karabakh region and surrounding areas.

Armenia said that three of its soldiers had been killed, with four of them injured. Azerbaijan said that two of its soldiers had been wounded.

In fighting from last September to November, Azerbaijani troops drove Armenian forces out of swathes of territory they had controlled since the 1990s in and around the Nagorno-Karabakh region, before Russia brokered a cease-fire.

A simmering border dispute between the two has since flared up, with both sides accusing each other of separate incursions into each others' territory in recent months, highlighting the fragility of the cease-fire.

Armenia has frequently called for military support from Russia. In a fresh attempt of expanding its sphere of influence in the Caucasus region, Russia in May occupied two new sites in the south of Armenia near the Azerbaijani border as an "additional security guarantee" following last year's conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

It also said it would continue to mediate and provide advisory assistance aimed at reaching an agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia, as the two countries look to settle border disputes that are nearly three decades old.

However, the one-sided and partial attitude of Russian military elements deployed in the Karabakh region to monitor a cease-fire deal signed in November in favor of the Armenian side has raised eyebrows in Azerbaijan.

Ankara has pledged its full support to Baku in its efforts to liberate its lands from Armenian occupation. Following the Nov. 10 signing of a Russia-brokered agreement to end the fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution, Turkey agreed with Russia that its troops would also monitor the cease-fire. Ankara and Moscow signed an agreement to establish a joint observation center in Nagorno-Karabakh as soon as possible.

Highlighting that President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and President Ilham Aliyev proposed a six-country platform for peace in the region in the postwar period, Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) Deputy Chair Numan Kurtulmuş said Wednesday that Ankara and Baku are sincere and determined to create an environment where all countries of the region –Turkey, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Russia, Iran and Georgia – will solve their problems among themselves and make economic gains together.

Armenian Parliament convenes extraordinary session – LIVE

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 12:00, 30 July, 2021

YEREVAN, JULY 30, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian Parliament has convened an extraordinary session today.

The session has been convened at the initiative of the ruling My Step faction members.

The lawmakers will debate at second hearing the bills on making amendments and changes to the Low on Road Traffic Safety, Automobile Transport and the State Border.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan