Computer centres
Children's Aid Direct identified a place that needed a new computer and
language school, Mingechevier, and worked with the local
government
to find a building we could work with. Mingechevier is on the
far western border of Azerbaijan, on the opposite side of the country to
Baku, which made for some long drives. It
borders Armenia, with whom Azerbaijan does not enjoy the best of
relations. In fact, the two countries are at war over a strip of
land that Armenia occupies, splitting Azerbaijan into two parts. The
refugees are people that have been displaced from that land, numbering
hundreds of thousands. The school was needed to provide the younger
of these refugees with a place to gain basic computer and language skills
to give them a chance at finding work in Baku (there was none in
Mingechevier).
  
The building is in the local university, which, through lack funds, had
fallen into substantial disrepair. The local government agreed to
repair the roof and we paid for the interior to be refurbished using local
labour. We then arrived, decorated, laid carpets, installed the
computers and set out the furniture we had brought with us.
   
  
We used office furniture and
computer equipment (donated by HSBC, augmented by hardware donated by Kingston
Technology and software by Microsoft),
all air freighted from the UK (sponsored by British
Airways) to create a sixteen station, NT server based network and
classroom. We even installed generators and a UPS - there are
frequent power cuts in Mingechevier and the power supply has a tendency to
'spike' blowing up computers! When the power goes off, they do not
know when it will return - there have been times in the winter when the
power demand has been sufficient to blow the main sub-station fuse,
requiring someone to go around with a hat to raise enough cash to pay for
a new fuse. That's tough.
Sufficient funds were left remaining to support
the centre for a further year as the charity prepared to hand over the
centre to the local authority.
   
The centre was opened on completion by the local deputy mayor,
filmed by local television, MTV (Mingechevier TV). There was a big party
and loads of speeches (boy do they know how to make great speeches over
there!). And check out the Deputy Mayor .. do you think he looks
after the Ministry of Security too? Our interpreter and local guru,
Karim is pictured below with the Deputy Mayor - what a top geezer!!
We loved Karim ... the Greatest Interpreter In The Whole of
Azerbaijan!!

  
A similar centre was also created in Birmingham in a local city-centre
school, attended primarily by under privileged local children. We hoped
that the two centres would communicate using internet technologies, with
the children sharing experiences and engaging in joint projects.

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