Unit 1012 Cover Photo

Unit 1012 Cover Photo

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

EU CANNOT threaten us: Turkey's WARNING to Juncker after Europe's order on death penalty


            We do not support the EU or the Turk Government but we admit that the Turkish Foreign Minister was correct in this case. EU has no right to dictate what each countries wants to have. 

 EU head: If Turkey went forward with the death penalty, there would be no hope in them joining the EU

EU Has No Right to Blackmail Turkey Over Death Penalty Issue – FM

12:36 25.07.2016

According to the Turkish foreign minister, the EU has no right to give Turkey any ultimatums regarding the possible reintroduction of the death penalty.

ANKARA (Sputnik) — The European Union has no right to give Turkey any ultimatums regarding the possible reintroduction of the death penalty, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Monday.

"Europe is not the owner of Turkey and we will not accept threats and being looked down on. If the EU has any questions, we are ready to discuss them," Cavusoglu told Haberturk.

Moreover, Turkey will replace a part of its ambassadors amid the investigation of the recent military coup attempt, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Monday.

"There will be layoffs, including at the ambassadorial level," Cavusoglu told Haberturk.




EU CANNOT threaten us: Turkey's WARNING to Juncker after Europe's order on death penalty

TURKEY'S foreign minister has said the EU CANNOT threaten Turkey regarding the death penalty.
03:01, Tue, Jul 26, 2016

Mevlut Cavusoglu told Haberturk TV that Juncker should not look down on Turkey or think it can be ordered around. 

The comments came in response to EU commission president Jean-Claude Juncker who said if Turkey went forward with the death penalty there would be no hope for the country joining the EU. 

Questioned Ankara's long-standing aspiration to join the EU, he said: "I believe that Turkey, in its current state, is not in a position to become a member any time soon and not even over a longer period. 

He told French television France 2 that if Turkey reintroduces the death penalty - something the government has said it must consider, responding to calls from supporters at public rallies for the coup leaders to be executed - it would stop the EU accession process immediately.

Turkey abolished capital punishment in 2004, allowing it to open EU accession talks the following year, but the negotiations have made scant progress since then.

Erdogan has declared a state of emergency, which allows him to sign new laws without prior parliamentary approval and limit rights as he deems necessary. The government has said these steps are needed to root out supporters of the coup and won't infringe on the rights of ordinary Turks.

It comes as Turkey ordered the detention of 42 journalists on Monday, broadcaster NTV reported, under a crackdown following a failed coup that has targeted more than 60,000 people, drawing fire from the European Union.

Saturday, July 7, 2018

ALINA SHEYKHET (JULY 7, 1997 TO OCTOBER 8, 2017)


            Let us not forget Russian American, Alina Sheykhet every year on July 7 and October 8. We will not forget the way you live on this earth.

Alina Sheykhet
(July 7, 1997 to October 8, 2018)

Alina Sheykhet remembered by friends as kind and loving
October 15, 2017
In a seventh grade stage production of “Thoroughly Modern Millie,” Isabel Scrabis’ grandfather mistook Alina Sheykhet — who starred as Millie — for his granddaughter.

“The whole entire time he thought I was Alina, and he was so impressed. My mom had to break it to him that I was just swaying in the background,” Scrabis said. “I told [Alina] that [story] whenever we became friends a few years later and she thought it was hilarious.”

Scrabis — one of Sheykhet’s best friends — said the two were essentially the “same person.”

“We would show up to school sometimes wearing the same thing,” Scrabis said, laughing. “We loved to go shopping.”

Scrabis and other close friends said they’ve been recalling fond memories of Sheykhet since Sunday, Oct. 8, when she was found dead in her home on Cable Place. Matthew Darby, Sheykhet’s ex-boyfriend whom she filed a protection-from-abuse order against, was charged with homicide Tuesday and arrested Wednesday in South Carolina.

Alina Sheykhet loved animals and joined the Animal Lovers Club at Pitt. (Photo courtesy of Isabel Scrabis)

Sheykhet, a Pitt junior aspiring to become a physical therapist, loved to sing and dance, her friends said. Scrabis — who met Sheykhet in middle school but became friends with her in their junior year at nearby Montour High School — said they took a number of chorus classes together and were in musicals together.

“She was so incredibly talented, had the most beautiful voice,” Scrabis said. “Anytime one of us would start singing the other one would join in.”

When Sheykhet broke her knee freshman year of high school, she was no longer able to pursue dancing to the extent she had previously. But Zach Brandner, her roommate and a current sophomore broadcasting media major at Point Park, said this accident helped inspire her path of study — physical therapy.

“In a way, her knee breaking ended one career but it started a new,” Brandner said.

  
Alina Sheykhet with her friend Isabel Scrabis. (Photo courtesy of Isabel Scrabis)

Sheykhet began her college career at Pitt Greensburg, where she met Brandner. Brandner and Sheykhet studied at the Greensburg campus for two years before moving into the same house this year on Cable Place in Oakland. Sheykhet began taking classes at Pitt’s main campus, and Brandner transferred to Point Park to pursue a major not offered a Pitt. Despite their busy schedules, Brandner and Sheykhet always managed to spend time together.

“Every minute of my life — well I don’t want to say every minute of my life — but so much of my life was spent with her,” Brandner said. “Every day of my life since we moved into the house that we were in in August, every day we hung out.”

At Pitt Greensburg, Brandner and Sheykhet were both part of the Outdoor Adventure and Community Service club — a club that offered both outdoor excursions, such as rock climbing, and service opportunities, such as volunteering at food pantries. Sheykhet served as the vice president of the club during her last year at the Greensburg campus.

Sheykhet was already beginning to get involved in the Pitt main campus community after transferring this year. She got a job working at the front desk at the Hilton Garden Inn on McKee Place, Scrabis said, and she joined the Animal Lovers Club at Pitt.

“Alina loved animals,” Scrabis said. “She was [recently] saying she was excited to go horseback riding.”

Paige O’Neil, a junior pharmacy major at Duquesne, became friends with Sheykhet in high school after taking a “college in high school” chemistry course together through Pitt. O’Neil said Sheykhet was extremely excited to move to main campus this year.

“She was like ‘Paige, we get to be together all the time! We’re going to have parties, you’re going to be over at my house every weekend! I get the big master bedroom — we’re going to hang out all the time!” O’Neil said.

Sheykhet’s friends all agreed she was funny, kind, loving and always had a smile on her face. Even after three years of friendship, Brandner said he and Sheykhet never fought.

“We used to joke all the time, I said, ‘Alina, we’ve been friends for three years and we haven’t had our first fight yet. Like, do you think we’re ever going to have a first fight?’ And she was like ‘no.’”

Brandner said he wants people to know that Sheykhet was more than what happened to her. He said it’s important that people focus on the good things about her and less on the person who ended her life.

“I love her so much,” Brandner said. “It was just a pleasure and an honor having her as my best friend.”
Editor’s note: Isabel Scrabis works for The Pitt News as an account executive.
 



Pitt student murder: 5 things to know about Alina Sheykhet
Updated: Oct 9, 2017 - 4:57 PM

PITTSBURGH - The murder of 20-year-old Pitt student Alina Sheykhet has shocked the community and those who knew her.  

Sheykhet was found unconscious inside a home in a home in the 3500 block of Cable Place Oakland on Sunday. 

Since her death, we have learned more about her life. 

Here are five things we’ve learned about Alina Sheykhet: 
1.  Alina Sheykhet was originally from Russia. Her brother, Artem Sheykhet, said their family moved here when she was 4 years old. 

2.  Alina was a graduate of Montour High School.  

3.  Her family has described her as "a beautiful and smart girl with a bright future." She was going to school at Pitt to become a physical therapist.

4.  While attending school in Oakland, Channel 11 learned she was working at the front desk at the Marriott in Oakland.  

5.  Channel 11 learned that Alina recently became an aunt. Her brother and his wife just had their first child.  

Courtney Brennan is working this story and will have any new developments on Channel 11 News, starting at 5 p.m.

Police continue to investigate leads into her death.  Police said Monday they do not believe it was a random act of violence.  

The medical examiner said she died of sharp/blunt force trauma. Her death was ruled a homicide.

Alina Sheykhet
(July 7, 1997 to October 8, 2018)

OTHER LINKS:
Death Penalty To Be Sought For Suspect In Pitt Student’s Murder
February 15, 2018 at 2:18 pm
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — The Allegheny County district attorney plans to pursue the death penalty against a man accused of murdering his ex-girlfriend.


VICTIM: Alina Sheykhet (7/7/1997 TO 10/8/2017)

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