Gene Simmons Interview: The Kiss Frontman And Reality TV Star Gives

GENE SIMMONS INTERVIEW: THE KISS FRONTMAN AND REALITY TV STAR GIVES ME A TONGUE LASHING

HeavyMetalMusic.biz
http://heavymetalmusi c.biz/2007/07/16/gene-simmons-interview-the-kiss-f rontman-and-reality-tv-star-gives-me-a-tongue-lash ing/
July 16 2007

What can I say about Gene Simmons? The ubiquitous founder and frontman
of the legendary rock band Kiss, and famously dogged entrepreneur
has provided me with an interview experience unlike any journalistic
encounter I have had thus far in my career. Luckily, I have been
exploring my spiritual side lately and the need to be right was
overshadowed by the understanding that my job is to let Simmons’
true voice and points of view come across. My left brain admired Gene
Simmons’ accomplishments and ingenuity, while my right brain marveled
at Simmons’ extreme views on women, money, love, and human nature.

Such profound insights as "No one has the right to argue with me,"
and "Men don’t chat," were imparted to me. I learned so much.

Then I caught a recent episode of Gene Simmons: Family Jewels as
I was editing this piece. I began to see the subtext of Simmons’
existence. It seems his partner of almost twenty-four years, Shannon
Tweed, wears the pants in many respects. His two children Sophie and
Nick also appear to have him wrapped around their young fingers. A
kinder and gentler family man emerges, one who is very much committed
to Tweed and their two teenage kids.

Our interview covers Simmons’ menagerie of projects including Gene
Simmons: Family Jewels, Simmons’ hit reality show on the A&E network
and his latest venture, a foray into the celebrity branded fashion
arena with the Moneybag clothing and accessories line. The Moneybag
line incorporates Simmons’ own registered trademark of the famous
"moneybag" image, which Simmons says he has owned for the past
twenty-five years.

PR.com (Allison Kugel): I know where I want to go with the first part
of the interview…

Gene Simmons: I know, but I know where I want to go…

PR.com: You tell me what you want to discuss first and foremost…

Gene Simmons: But I’m trying. That’s why I can’t get married, because
the male of the species could never finish a sentence. You guys won’t
let us. And I mean that in the very nicest way.

PR .com: (Laughs) I’m sorry to interrupt you after what you just
said, but I have to ask you a question based on that. What is the
difference between living with a woman and marrying a woman? Don’t
you still have the same problems communicating?

Gene Simmons: Oh, we don’t care about communication. We just care
about the fact that if we decide to break up, that you don’t take
half of our money.

(This is interesting, because Gene has been in a domestic relationship
with model Shannon Tweed for over twenty-three years, and seems not
to be ending this union any time soon.)

PR.com: Ok, what’s a typical day like for you?

Gene Simmons: Well it starts early usually, because east coast gets
up early. Sometimes its 5:00 AM [when I get up], so that I can catch
Europe before they go to sleep.

PR.com: What kind of business dealings do you have in Europe? Or what
kind of business dealings do you have in general with the Kiss brand
and the licensing? I notice that you’ve licensed your trademark to
many different companies.

Gene Simmons: Well Kiss has close to three thousand licensed products:
everything from Kiss condoms to Kiss caskets. We’ll get you coming
and we’ll get you going.

PR.com. (Laughs).

Gene Simmons: But Kiss is only one part of it. We have the Gene
Simmons brand which has Simmons Books, The Simmons Comics Group,
and of course the TV show, the Gene Simmons: Family Jewels. So,
I basically do a kind of a Clark Kent/Superman parallel universe,
where I’m proud to be a member of Kiss and I work on that, and also
brand Gene Simmons outside of that. The two don’t usually cross. They
have their own sort of integrity.

Gene Simmons, Decked Out in Full Kiss Makeup

PR.com: Since you seem to be the ultimate entrepreneur, when you
started Kiss, when you co-founded Kiss I should say, was it simply
a means to an end for you?

Gene Simmons: It always is and always will be, because rock n’ roll
is home to people who would otherwise be asking the next person if
they’d like some fries with that.

PR.com: Well, that’s if you’re successful at it…

Gene Simmons: What I meant was that if it wasn’t for rock n’ roll you’d
be at McDonalds because the people who inhabit the world of popular
music can’t do anything. They have no skills, and we fall into this
kind of business that reacts to charisma. We’re not the best singers,
and we’re not the best dancers. Very few people… I mean, Prince is
an exception, but … nobody can read or write music.

We’re all just self-taught and we do what we do, and that’s sort of it.

PR.com: Did you have a passion for music?

Gene Simmons: No. I just wanted to get rich and famous… in that
order.

PR.com: That’s another thing that I was going to ask you… if you
had a choice between rich or famous, which one do you think you
would choose?

Gene Simmons: Rich every time! You can be famous and be poor. But if
you’re rich, who cares. And if money can’t buy you happiness… well
if you’re going to be a miserable son of a bitch, it’s still better
to be a rich miserable son of a bitch.

PR.com: Well, someone I interviewed said to me recently, "I don’t
understand why people always say "money can’t buy you happiness."

Money was never meant to buy you happiness. It was meant to make
you comfortable."

Gene Simmons: None of that is correct because if you’re a mother and
you have a child, your child needs things. And love is not the first
thing it needs. The first thing it needs is food and shelter. If it
has a cough or is sick, you take it to the doctor. Actually, money
is the expression of love, whether it’s presents or buying your
girlfriend clothing or jewelry, you express your love with money.

PR.com: I want to talk about your background because I know your
mother is a Holocaust survivor.

Gene Simmons: It’s too easy to say "Holocaust." It’s more accurate
to say German Nazi.

PR.com: Right. Well, I’m Jewish myself.

Gene Simmons: Well, German Nazi Holocaust is different than the
Turkish Armenian Holocaust.

PR.com: Ok.

Gene Simmons: You see what I mean?

PR.com: She was in a Nazi concentration camp, correct?

Gene Simmons: Correct.

PR.com: When did she end up in Israel, and then how did the family
eventually come to emigrate to the United States?

Gene Simmons: I was born in 1949. My mother and my father were
Hungarian Jews and it was not an easy time, certainly to be Jewish, and
not an easy time for the entire planet. I was oblivious to all that. I
was born, and as long as I had a piece of bread and jam, because we
did not have meat or milk or eggs or any of that stuff… as long as
I had a piece of bread and lots of jam on top of it I was deliriously
happy. I didn’t care about anything else. And to this day, that is
my favorite dessert. Thick, thick corn bread or pumpernickel bread
toasted with jam on it.

PR.com: You’ve said that what drives you is that, from when you were
young, you have memories of being hungry.

Gene Simmons: Work is good. It’s clear in your mind if you were once
desperately poor. You appreciate [being rich] and you understand
that nothing happens by itself, and that it is all hard work. What’s
interesting is that the richest guys in the world get up every day and
go to work. Whether you’re Arab Sheiks with your oil wells… they
continue to make deals all the time. Most people think it’s about a
job that’s just nine to five. Work involves doing something all the
time, the love of labor.

PR.com: What do you teach your kids about the value of a dollar and
how to earn money, and how to keep money?

Gene Simmons: Well they have never had an allowance. If you need
money for clothing you get that. If you want to buy a toy, you have
to tell me why. They do certainly understand the nature of stuff.

When I want to buy them something really nice, both of them will say,
"No, you really don’t need to [buy] that dad." Have you ever seen
our show (A&E’s "Gene Simmons: Family Jewels")?

PR.com: I have seen it. I did not see it this past season but I saw the
first season. I remember one episode when you were trying to teach your
son about money because he made a comment about twenty-thousand dollars
not being that difficult to make, or it kind of being dispensable.

Gene Simmons: Yeah, try making twenty-thousand!

PR.com: I know, believe me (laughs)! I know it’s difficult.

Gene Simmons: I mean, it’s not a lot for me, but the idea is that a
penny is a lot, ’cause if you don’t have a penny, that’s not good.

PR.com: Well, it’s not easy to generate money and it takes
innovation. It takes a lot of thought. It starts in the mind. So, it’s
well known and well documented that you’re highly against marriage
and you never want to get married.

Gene Simmons: For me.

PR.com: Right. You’re against it for you.

Gene Simmons: I don’t believe man is designed to be married.

PR.com: Do you believe women are designed to be married?

Gene Simmons: Yes, you’re biologically designed that way. You nest.

You lay your eggs… I mean talking bird language… you lay your eggs
and you build your nest. You want the white picked fence. Neither is
good or bad. It’s just what you’re designed for. During the month,
during a thirty day period, you drop one or two eggs. That’s it!

Every day we make hundreds of millions of sperm in the same time it
takes you to make two eggs. We’re tens of billions of sperm. Either
that’s a great cosmic joke by God, or it has something to do with
the blueprint of what we do.

Shannon Tweed & Gene Simmons

PR.com: Then what has kept you in your relationship (with model
Shannon Tweed) for over twenty years?

Gene Simmons: My decisions, my rules. No marriage. That’s no one to
ask me "Where you are going?" Because I would immediately respond by,
"Who wants to know?"

PR.com: Do you believe in fidelity?

Gene Simmons: I believe in nobody else having anything to say about
your lifestyle. If you want to be [faithful] that should be a personal
decision, not up to your girlfriend or your boyfriend.

That’s the problem with marriage. Somebody else has a right to say
how you lead your life. Not even your mother has that right, and she
gave you life itself. Why would you ever give anybody else that right?

PR.com: It’s a valid point. I’ll give you that.

Gene Simmons: You meet somebody as a grown up, and all of a sudden
you have to answer to them?? What?!

PR.com: Well, there’s two sides to that coin.

Gene Simmons: No there isn’t. There is only one side, and that is
that you’re desperately trying to protect your one or two eggs. It’s
biological.

PR.com: No, no, I understand that, but do you care if your partner
is being faithful?

Gene Simmons: Well, I think that has to do with ego. It doesn’t
have to do with this kind of desperate biological urge. For women
it’s desperate and biological. For men it’s just about ego. And ego,
you know, you get over that.

PR.com: What do you explain to your daughter about what you want
for her?

Gene Simmons: Simple idea, don’t define yourself by men, which is
what all women do. Every woman’s magazine is, "Ten ways to keep
him interested," or "Ten things he’s thinking about." There isn’t
a men’s magazine that has anything to do with trying to figure out
what women are thinking about, because we actually don’t care what
you’re thinking about. We are too busy thinking our own thoughts. You
spend all that time because you are desperate, because you have one
or two eggs a month, and by the time you’re in your middle years you
go nuts. "Gotta get a man, gotta get a man, gotta get a man!"

(But also, every issue of a men’s magazine that I’ve picked up has
articles like "How to Please Her in Bed," "How to Attract a Hot Girl,"
or "Is Your Penis the Right Size and Shape?")

Gene Simmons: So the idea for Sophie is not to define herself by a
man. Forget what he wants. What do you want?

PR.com: Do you want to see her get married?

Gene Simmons: Only if she wants to. Marriage means nothing to me.

Happiness means everything. All I see in marriage is a lot of
desperately unhappy people. That’s why there are marriage jokes. By
the way, there are no "single" jokes. Try one. I don’t know of any.

"Why do men die younger than their wives? Because they want to." Then
everybody laughs. Here is a "single" joke: "I got up and I did
whatever I wanted to do, whenever I wanted to do it, at any time,
and without checking with anyone."

PR.com: But the rest of that sentence would be, "…but I’m lonely."

Gene Simmons: Well you’re not because being single means you can keep
swinging your bat until you hit one.

PR.com: At least your argument is well thought out.

Gene Simmons: I think it is called man.

PR.com: Does Shannon agree with all of your philosophies?

Gene Simmons: Absolutely not.

PR.com: Do you ever argue about it?

Gene Simmons: Never. No one has the right to argue with me. I can
open the discussion but nobody can sit there and… there’s no passing
judgment. You accept the idea that you know people think in a certain
way, because it’s biology.

PR.com: But there was an episode in your show…

Gene Simmons: You can’t argue with a lion about why it wants to eat
meat. It just does…

Gene Simmons & Shannon Tweed with Children Nick & Sophie

PR.com: There was an episode in your show, where she was trying to
coerce you into getting married.

Gene Simmons: Surprise! All women do that (laughs).

PR.com: Even twenty-three years into the relationship, she still
wants to get married?

Gene Simmons: Women never give up.

PR.com: I am interested in your thoughts on the war in Iraq.

Gene Simmons: Well, I think everybody in America is on crack, and
believes that you can go on your summer vacation, you fight a war
and you come back. This war will continue for generations, and it
has nothing to do with tanks and guns. It has to do with winning the
minds and hearts of young Muslim people so that they don’t choose 9/11
kind of behavior. It’s the dark ages, this idea that you can go there
for a few years and come home. We have been in Korea for decades and
we should continue to be there until a new generation comes in and
just finally gives up. You’ve got to fight the war like The Cold War;
be there as long as it takes, and finally Russia lays down its arms.

PR.com: Do you think this all goes back to the United Nations giving
the Jewish people the state of Israel?

Gene Simmons: Well, let’s not go there. It’s too political. The problem
is not Israel or anything else. People hate each other and have for
centuries. Actually, ever since we started walking the earth. One
cave did not like the other cave. They were taller or shorter or
fatter or darker or lighter. Human beings can barely get along.

PR.com: Why do you think?

Gene Simmons: I think it’s survival and competition, whether its
sports or jousting knights in shining armor, or beauty pageants for
women… or you look at animals. You see rams ramming each other,
and there is always the pecking order. Who is going to be top dog?

PR.com: What do you think about celebrities speaking out about their
opinions on the war?

Gene Simmons: Pathetic and they’re not qualified to talk about it. I
think everybody means well, but whether you are far left or far right,
Al-Qaeda does not care what you are or what your beliefs are.

They don’t care if you want to withdraw and go home. They want you
to die. There is no difference [to] an extremist Muslim. They’re not
interested if you are for the war or against the war. You’re just
all Americans to them.

PR.com: Let’s talk about the Moneybag clothing line…

Gene Simmons: You mind me asking how old you are?

PR.com: Thirty-two. Why do you ask?

Gene Simmons: You sound nineteen.

PR.com: Really?

Gene Simmons: Yeah

PR.com: Well, I kind of take that as a compliment.

Gene Simmons: Well, with women you never know, you can’t win.

PR.com: I’m proud of my age.

Gene Simmons: You’re missing the point. You ignored what I said. What
I said was if there’s a twenty year old girl and she say’s, "How old
do you think I am?" and the guy says, "Nineteen," she says, "Oh, I
look that young?" "Ok, twenty-one." "Oh, I look that old?" "Ok, that
must mean you’re twenty." "Oh, you mean I look my age?" You can’t win.

PR.com: Well, you could win with me. I have no problem being my age
and I have no problem sounding younger than my age.

Gene Simmons: We are just chatting away. Men don’t chat. We just want
to get to it.

PR.com: You went off on that tangent.

Gene Simmons: Ok.

PR.com: Ok, so we digress. Let’s talk about the Moneybag clothing line.

Gene Simmons & Jason Dussault

Gene Simmons: A guy named Jason Dussault… I was contacted by a
guy named Terry Fitzgerald who does work with the McFarlane people
(Todd McFarlane’s Comics). They are the people I made a deal with
for the Kiss Psycho Circus comics. One thing led to the other. I
met Jason and he was fascinated to learn that I own the "moneybag"
logo and have for over twenty-five years, and have used it sparingly
in my record company, Simmons Records and my book imprint, Simmons
Books. I tried the Moneybag clothing line a while back with another
entity that didn’t satisfy me, just in terms of the business structure.

Jason was starting his own [company], Dussault Custom Ink. He wanted
to license the "moneybag" logo, and I said, "Well here is a better
idea. We can do a joint venture. I’ll provide sweat equity and all
this kind of stuff, and you manufacture and distribute." So we joined
forces. It will officially debut in August at The Magic Show in Las
Vegas, although there are already thousands of orders from stores
all across the country.

PR.com: Is everything going to feature the "moneybag" logo on it?

Gene Simmons: Yes

PR.com: Is most of the merchandise going to be t-shirts?

Gene Simmons: And wallets, leather goods, carry-on cases in airports…

that kind of stuff. There is going to be jewelry and charm bracelets.

PR.com: The actual picture of the bag with the dollar sign on it? You
own that trademark?

Gene Simmons: I do. I trademarked that twenty-five years ago when I
started signing my name with two slashes through the "S." Then that
was trademarked because it was an application of the dollar sign.

Then I wondered if anybody actually owned the "moneybag," the dollar
sign with the bag around it, and found that nobody did.

PR.com: I’m shocked about that, because I have seen it in cartoons
and all over the place.

Gene Simmons: That doesn’t mean they own it. People use all kinds of
thing they don’t own.

PR.com: How involved are you? Do you get involved in design and
production?

Gene Simmons: No, that is Jason. But we have a conversation before,
during and after. He says, "What you think about this?" I go, "No
that’s not good. How about this? How about that?" We talk about,
you know, marketing and how and where.

PR.com: Where is the product manufactured?

Gene Simmons: I don’t know… if you make a record with a record
company, where is the record manufactured? Where is the CD done? I
don’t know.

PR.com: Ok. Tell me about My Dad the Rock Star.

Gene Simmons: That’s a cartoon show that has been on the air around
the world for years, actually; about four years. I created that show
sort of as… when our son Nick was younger, around twelve, I wondered
what it was like from his point of view with a famous mom and a famous
dad. So, My Dad the Rock Star, even the title, is from the little
boy’s point of view. But it’s semi-autobiographical. I mean Rock Zilla
(the animated father) kind of looks like me, but it’s not Kiss.

PR.com: With Gene Simmons: Family Jewels, when is the next season
starting?

Gene Simmons: Well they are supposed to start filming in August.

Although you missed season two.

Gene Simmons Celebrating His MoneyBag Logo

PR.com: You’re right about that, but I did see season one. How long
does filming take?

Gene Simmons: No rhyme or reason, you know, sometimes it’s two days
per episode or it could take a week. Depends on what you do.

PR.com: Are you guys scripted and set up by producers to say or do
certain things?

Gene Simmons: No, but there’s got to be some format. I don’t memorize
any lines and nobody writes anything down for me, but there is a
format. If I am going to an Indy car race for instance, I’ll tell the
crew and they will just see what the activities are, and they’ll try
to make sense of it.

For more information about Gene Simmons’ "Moneybag" clothing line,
visit or

www.genesimmonsmoneybag.com
www.genesimmons.com.

Despite Turkey reforms, gay community says it lacks legal protection

Despite Turkey’s reforms, gay community says it lacks legal protections
The Associated Press
Jul. 15, 2007 06:27 AM

ANKARA, Turkey – In the 1980s and 1990s, Turkish police routinely
raided gay bars, detained transvestites and banned homosexual
conferences and festivals.

In May, in a sign of how the state has loosened up, gay activists held
forums on several university campuses to discuss their rights and the
discrimination they still face. Some delegates came from Norway and
Sweden, and discussion topics included homophobia, the history of
homosexuality and gay life on campuses.

Gays in Turkey say they lack legal protections and face social stigma
in a Muslim nation with a secular tradition of government that has
implemented broad reforms in its bid to join the European Union – but
remains heavily influenced by conservative and religious values. For
the most part, they face less pressure than in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and
other Muslim countries where Islamic codes are enforced with more
rigor.

However, Turkey’s homosexuals are jostling for more rights in a crowded
field.

The historical feud between Turks and Armenians, as well as the
concerns of ethnic Kurds and minority Christians, attract more
international attention and pressure for change on the Turkish
government.

"There are so many problems in Turkey," Ali Erol, a member of the gay
rights group Kaos GL, said in an interview in his office in Ankara, the
Turkish capital. "It looks as though gay rights are put down below in
the list of things to be taken care of."

In March, the chief editor of the group’s magazine, also named Kaos GL,
was acquitted of charges that he had illegally published pornography in
a July 2006 issue after a judge noted that copies were seized before
they were put on sale. The editor, Umut Guner, could have faced several
years in jail if convicted.

The issue that got the magazine in trouble showed two images of men in
explicit sexual poses, beside an article that editors described as an
analysis of issues relating to pornography. The magazine first
published in 1994, and became legal when it secured a license five
years later. It comes out every two months, and has a circulation of up
to 1,000.

In recent years, Turkey reworked its penal code to bring it into line
with European standards. The new version does not specifically ban
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, although the issue
was discussed at the draft stage.

Justice Ministry officials had said that laws barring discrimination on
the basis of gender, race, ethnicity, religion and political views were
enough to protect its citizens.

"There are some hate crime’ articles in the criminal code, but they are
not used appropriately," said Levent Korkut, head of Amnesty
International’s operations in Turkey. "Impunity is a problem in this
area."

He noted that even some Turks who describe themselves as liberals say:
"We don’t want to protect these people."

Gay sex is not a crime in Turkey, and some clubs and cinemas in big
cities openly cater to homosexuals. Gay and lesbian societies exist at
several universities. But the vast majority of homosexuals remain
discreet in a country where liberal views have yet to make inroads in
rural areas and many urban settings. Municipalities have some leeway to
introduce laws safeguarding "morality," which gay activists view as a
potential threat to their freedom.

Some gays, notably poet Murathan Mungan and the late singer Zeki Muren,
achieved celebrity status and openly acknowledged their sexual
orientation. Similarly, historians and novelists have referred to a
degree of tolerance for gay sex among some sectors of the elite during
the Ottoman Empire centuries ago.

Yet, for many, being homosexual is an exercise in deception. One gay
man, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said he was distraught years
ago because high school classmates kept calling him "ibne," a
derogatory word for gay in Turkish.

The man, now a university student, said he avoids physical contact with
his boyfriend when they are in public, and passes him off as a close
friend. He said he is often mocked if he wears an article of clothing
that people think is feminine.

Unable to find regular jobs, many transvestites and transsexuals work
as prostitutes, an often dangerous profession that has led to the
murders of some at the hands of clients.

Some deadly "hate crimes" were never publicized because police did not
reveal the sexual orientation of the victims, according to gay
activists. In some cases, they said, gays who were harassed or
physically harmed because of their orientation did not report the
incident or go to court because they wanted to avoid scrutiny.

The European Union has funded gay groups in Turkey, which sometimes
coordinate with the Turkish Ministry of Health and other government
agencies. Kaos GL has links to Lambda Istanbul, a gay group in Turkey’s
biggest city, and hosted an "international anti-homophobia" meeting on
university campuses in Ankara nearly two months ago.

"We want to share and learn the experiences of all gays and lesbians
who struggle against homophobia in the Middle East, Balkans, Europe and
the other parts of the world," the group said in a statement. About 20
participants came from other countries, and Erol said after the
meetings: "We have now moved beyond the borders."

The Kaos GL magazine paid tribute to Hrant Dink, an ethnic Armenian
journalist who was allegedly slain by extremist nationalists in
January, by printing a somber image of him on the back cover of a
recent issue.

"Those people who murdered Hrant Dink do not like us either," Erol
said.

Dink’s family seeks action against police

Gulf Times, Qatar
July 15 2007

Dink’s family seeks action against police

Published: Sunday, 15 July, 2007, 02:19 AM Doha Time

A woman walking past a portrait of Devlet Bahceli, leader of
Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) on a campaign car in Istanbul
yesterday. Turkish political parties geared up to campaign for the
upcoming early parliamentary elections next Sunday
ISTANBUL: The family of slain Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink
asked prosecutors yesterday to launch judicial action against the
police on charges of protecting the murderer, Anatolia news agency
reported.
The application concerns members of the security forces who took
`souvenir pictures’ with the self-confessed killer, 17-year-old Ogun
Samast, after he was captured in the northern city of Samsun, a day
after shooting Dink in Istanbul on January 19.
Footage leaked to the media at the time showed officers posing with
Samast as he held a Turkish flag, unleashing accusations that some
officials may secretly approve of the murder.
A prominent member of Turkey’s tiny Armenian community, Dink
campaigned for Turkish-Armenian reconciliation, but was hated by
nationalists for describing the mass killings of Armenians under the
Ottoman Empire as genocide, a label that Ankara fiercely rejects.
`The officers… greeted the murder suspect as a national hero and
queued up to take souvenir pictures with him,’ the Dink family’s
lawyers said in their application against 21 members of the police
and the gendarme, a paramilitary force policing rural areas.
`A kiss on the forehead was the only thing he was not given,’ it
said.
The lawyers demanded that the officers be put on trial for `abusing
office’, `protecting a criminal offender’ and `commending crime’,
Anatolia reported.
The application called for the annulment of an earlier decision by
prosecutors in Samsun that there was no ground to indict the officers
on the said charges.
The police are also under fire for failing to prevent the murder
despite having received intelligence of a plot to kill Dink being
organised in the northern city of Trabzon, the home of Samast and
most of his 17 suspected associates.
No official has so far been charged over the murder.
At the first hearing of the trial this month, the court accepted
demands by the Dink family’s lawyers to expand the investigation
after they accused the police of `almost an intentional negligence.’
Dink’s murder sent Turkey into shock and more than 100,000 people
marched at his funeral, chanting `We are all Hrants, we are all
Armenians.’ – AFP

Carlos Acosta in the Bolshoi

Carlos Acosta in the Bolshoi

13 July 07
rlos_acosta_in_the_bolshoi.html

Cuban dancer Carlos Acosta is currently one of the top world’s ballet
figures and a superstar of the London Royal Ballet Covent Garden with
which he’ll dance in the Bolshoi Theatre of Moscow this month.

Cuban dancer Carlos Acosta is currently one of the top world’s ballet
figures and a superstar of the London Royal Ballet Covent Garden with
which he’ll dance in the Bolshoi Theatre of Moscow this month.

Performing in the Bolshoi Theatre is a challenge and a good pretext for
the renowned hit maker to show his extraordinary athleticism and
remarkable technical virtuosity as the famous Russian Ballet Company’s
director Alexei Ratmanski said.

Watching Carlos Acosta dance Spartacus ` by the Armenian composer Aram
Khachaturian ` should be a breathtaking experience due to his
outstanding Cuban National Ballet School-style technique and personal
grace, key factors of his unique performances.

"As a Cuban man, Acosta has a revolutionary passion, vital for the
characters he stages. Besides such a heroic and virile image in dancing
is uncommonly seen in the contemporary dancers" Ratmanski said to the
critics.

Today there are only four dancers that can play Spartacus in the
Bolshoi; Belogolovtsev, Klevtsov, Matvienko and Vorobiov. And now
Carlos Acosta joins our Company as soloist guest star to dance not
only in Moscow but also to open London’s ballet season from July 30 on.

Recognized with the highest credits and acclaimed by classic ballet
lovers worldwide Acosta has conquered most demanding specialized
criticism thanks to his unparallel and purest technique and of course
the artistic formation acquired at the Cuban Ballet Company School
co-founded by Alicia and Fernando Alonso, whose graduates are highly
praised for their brilliant performances.

Source: By Uriel Medina, CubaSi

http://www.cubaheadlines.com/2007/07/13/4429/ca

Second Convention Of European Armenians Set To Convene This October

SECOND CONVENTION OF EUROPEAN ARMENIANS SET TO CONVENE THIS OCTOBER

armradio.am
12.07.2007 11:47

The growth of the Armenian community as a powerful voice in the civic
life of Europe will mark a major milestone with the convening, this
October, of the second Convention of European Armenians.

The pan European convention, to be held between October 15 and 16th
in the halls of the European Parliament, is being organized by the
European Armenian Federation.

The two-day Convention, which comes on the 20th anniversary of
the European Union’s landmark resolution recognizing the Armenian
Genocide, will provide European citizens of Armenian heritage with the
opportunity to share views, discuss priorities, and build consensus
on the current issues and future challenges impacting Armenia and
Armenians in a rapidly changing Europe.

Among the key issues to be addressed, both among the conferees and to
European leaders, include the EU’s partial freezing of negotiations
with an increasingly intransigent Turkey, and the evolution of the
Union’s relations with Armenia and the entire South Caucasus region.

The Convention will be organized around three main sessions: Twenty
years of progress since the recognition of the Armenian genocide by
the European Parliament, Europe’s role in peace and security in the
South Caucasus region, Ongoing Armenian Genocide recognition efforts
and the struggle to counter Genocide denial.

The European Armenian Federation will soon send European Armenian
associations, groups and organizations a preliminary document outlining
the priority issues facing the European Armenian community.

"We invite all the members of our European Armenian communities and
all the many diverse European Armenian associations to participate in
the preparations for the Second Convention of the European Armenians,
to attend and actively take part in its deliberations, and to lend
their unique contributions to developing a common message that we
can deliver to European civic society and leadership," said Hilda
Tchoboian, the chairperson of the European Armenian Federation.

150 Members Of The UK Parliament Support Armenian Genocide Motion

150 MEMBERS OF THE UK PARLIAMENT SUPPORT ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MOTION

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.07.2007 15:06 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Another important milestone on the way to UK
Recognition of the Armenian Genocide was passed today. MP Glenda
Jackson became the 150th Member of the UK Parliament to sign the Early
Day Motion 357, recognizing Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire,
independent French journalist Jean Eckian told PanARMENIAN.Net.

This motion, submitted by MP Bob Spink, has put the Armenian Genocide
issue at the forefront of international issues in which MPs have
shown concern.

Including other MPs who signed the Genocide Motion in previous years
but were unable to do so this year for parliamentary technical reasons,
the total number now approaches 200.

The majority of MPs who are eligible to sign the motion, and
unconstrained by their party, have now done so. 180 out of 460 MPs,
who are eligible to sign, are members of the Conservative Party who
provide a ready-made answer explaining why their members will not
sign. However, few Conservatives have dared to break with the Party’s
authority. 143 out of the other 280 MPs of the Labor Party, Liberal
Democrat Party, Scottish National Party, Plaid Cymru (Party of Wales)
and smaller parties just over half have signed the motion.

To continue with the lobbying, a copy of the "House of Commons
Conference on the Armenian Genocide" published by Nor Serount
Cultural Association, to all MPs be circulated this week will. It
includes contributions by historians and other Genocide Scholars. The
organizations expect that this will enable all MPs to have more
knowledge of the issue, resulting in more signatures in the three
weeks left for the motion after the summer recess.

Voting is most likely to take place in winter.

212 Emblematic Works From Louvre To Armenian History Museum

212 EMBLEMATIC WORKS FROM LOUVRE TO ARMENIAN HISTORY MUSEUM

Panorama.am
16:13 11/07/2007

"Saint Armenia" Exhibition kicked off in Louvre from Frebruary 19 till
May 29 will be presented in the History Museum of Armenia from August
to October within the frameworks of the Year of Armenia in France. Vice
Minister of Culture Gagik Gyurjyan informed about that Panorama.am
correspondent. As he informed all the 212 works are already here in
Armenia(31 cross-stones among them).G.Gyurjyan mentioned that due to
the agreement signed with the Louvre management the exhibition will be
presented here as it was done there. Regarding the vice-president’s
words the exhibition had great achievements and millions of visitors
in France.

The exhibition presented exceptional loans from the Museum and Treasury
of the Etsmiadzin Holy See, Matenadaran and from the National History
Museum. The exhibition first revealed the Adoption of Christianity
and the creation of the Armenian Alphabet in the 4th and the 5th
centuries ,then the first "Golden Age" and the "Church Independence"
in the 6th and 7th centuries, Islamic and Byzantine revivals in the
8th and 13th centuries and the 13th and 15th centuries "Mets Hayk"
and the Persian and Ottoman revivals in the 13th and 15th centuries.

Vice-president G.Gyurjan also said that after the exhibition held in
the History Museum of Armenia all the works will be returned to the
museums , the cross-stones will be brought to the different regions
of the Republic taken with signboards to have been presented in the
Year of Armenia in France exhibition.

TBILISI: Armenian Natural Gas Imports Up 22 Percent

ARMENIAN NATURAL GAS IMPORTS UP 22 PERCENT
By M. Alkhazashvili
(Translated by Diana Dundua)

The Messenger, Georgia
July 6 2007

In the first half of this year ArmRosGazprom imported 1.1 billion
cubic meters of natural gas to Armenia. This is 22.1 percent, or
237.4 million cubic meters, more than the previous year.

According to the news agency Regnum, out of the total natural gas
imported, 950.1 million cubic meters have already been used, mostly
by the general population.

In 2006, 1.7 billion cubic meters of natural gas were imported to
Armenia, of which 1.6 billion cubic meters have been consumed.

ArmRosGazprom, established in 1997, has a monopoly on delivering and
distributing Russian natural gas to the Armenian domestic market.

ArmRosGazprom’s capital now stands at USD 400 million.

for pie charts
y_6_2007/eco_1394_1.htm

http://www.messenger.com.ge/issues/1394_jul

UN Warns Of Regress In Kosovo Process

UN WARNS OF REGRESS IN KOSOVO PROCESS

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.07.2007 14:06 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Kosovo’s overall progress towards building a
functioning economy and establishing democratic institutions of
self-government has been encouraging, but those advances could soon
unravel unless the Serbian province’s future status is determined,
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon says.

In his latest progress report on the work of the United Nations
Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK), Mr. Ban writes that
the progress being made under UN administration is threatened by the
continuing tensions between the province’s ethnic communities.

"Sustaining and consolidating progress made by Kosovo will require
concrete prospects for the conclusion of the future status process
and the active and constructive cooperation of all involved," he
says, adding that the determination of Kosovo’s final status should
as such remain a priority of the Security Council and the broader
international community.

In March, a report by the Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for the
future status process Martti Ahtisaari found that the only viable
option for Kosovo, where ethnic Albanians outnumber Serbs and others
by nine to one, was a phased process of independence. Kosovo’s Albanian
leadership support independence but Serbia is opposed.

Mr. Ban notes in his report that Kosovo’s so-called Provisional
Institutions of Self-Government (PISG) have made "concrete progress"
towards meeting the standards, a set of eight overall targets that
include building democratic institutions, enforcing minority rights,
creating a functioning economy and setting up an impartial legal
system.

"The Provisional Institutions have laid the basis for a peaceful
and normal life for all of the people of Kosovo," Mr. Ban writes,
while observing that much remains to be done in achieving some of
the targets.

UNMIK has run Kosovo since Western forces drove out Yugoslav forces
amid inter-ethnic fighting in 1999.

The Secretary-General stresses that reintegrating and reconciling
the communities of Kosovo "remains an uphill challenge." Kosovo
Serbs in particular feel that the PISG do not represent them, and a
large majority boycott the institutions and rely instead on parallel
structures supported by authorities in Belgrade.

"At the same time, returns of Kosovo Serbs remain disappointingly low
due to uncertain economic prospects and continuing security-related
concerns."

Mr. Ban’s report, released ahead of Security Council consultations on
Kosovo scheduled for next Monday, contains a technical assessment
of the progress towards the standards by Joachim Rucker, the
Secretary-General’s Special Representative in the province, the UN
communication unit reports.

Opening And Closing Ceremonies Of "Golden Apricot" Film Festival To

OPENING AND CLOSING CEREMONIES OF "GOLDEN APRICOT" FILM FESTIVAL TO TAKE PLACE ON LIBERTY SQUARE
By R. Pogosian

AZG Armenian Daily
07/07/2007

The Fourth International "Golden Apricot" Film Festival is remarkable
with the fact that the opening ceremony is to be held on the Liberty
Square of Yerevan, July 9. The ceremony is scheduled to start at 10:00
PM and the first film is to be demonstrated right there. Commissions
of FIPRESCI and the International Organization of Churches shall take
part in the festival. Retrospective demonstrations of films by Leos
Karaks, Li Chang-Dong, Frunze Dovlatian and Yuri Yerznkian shall take
place. A part of the festival shall be dedicated to the newest French
films and another, which is called "Europe-2006", shall be dedicated
to the Lars von Trier’s "Inner Empire" and Steven Freeze’s "The Queen"

On a press conference at Yerevan hotel director of the festival
Haroutiun Khachatrian informed that VivaCell Company provides for
AMD 2 000 000 award for the festival’s grand prix and AMD 1 000 000
award for the winners of the "Armenian Panorama" and "International
Documentary Film" contests. A new award – "Tree of Life" with AMD
500 000 is also established this year.

The organizers of the festival provide the students and culture workers
the opportunity of attending 20-30 film demonstrations for free.

"AZG" daily, as one of the information sponsors of the festival,
through July 9-14 shall be published with a special appendix, providing
detailed information on all festival events, films, etc.