20, September 2019
Israel: Gantz rejects Netanyahu’s unity offer, vows own coalition 0
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s strongest rival, Benny Gantz, has thrown out his offer for a coalition, after their battle in the regime’s latest general elections ended up in a deadlock.
Gantz’s centrist Blue and White party is slightly ahead of Netanyahu’s Likud in the second round of voting this year, which was held Tuesday. However, they both lack the numbers of seats in the 120-member parliament to form a ruling bloc.
Netanyahu, Israel’s longest-serving leader, urged Gantz, the former military chief of the regime, to meet him Thursday, because he had pledged to form a right-wing government led by Likud.
“But to my regret, the election results show that this is impossible,” Netanyahu said in a video message on Thursday. “Benny, we must set up a broad unity government, as soon as today.”
Gantz, in response, said without mentioning Netanyahu and his request that he himself was going to form a “liberal” coalition, implying that he would not become allies with Netanyahu.
Moshe Yaalon, another top leader of the Blue and White, gave a more detailed response later in the day, saying his party was not willing to join forces with Likud mainly because of the looming corruption charges against Netanyahu.
“We will not enter a coalition led by Netanyahu,” Yaalon said.
“The time has come for you to tell Netanyahu: ‘Thank you for all you’ve done’,” Yaalon urged Likud members, who are yet to show signs of rebellion against the PM.
The swift rejection left Netanyahu “surprised and disappointed,” prompting him to repeat the call.
“It’s what the public expects of us,” Netanyahu said later in the day.
Gantz had taken a similar position over the course of the campaign and suggested several times that an alliance would only be possible if Likud dumped Netanyahu.
The election came five months after an inconclusive vote in August, where Netanyahu once again failed to form a majority government.
With 99 percent of votes counted, Israeli media are saying that a Likud-led right-wing bloc looks set to control 55 of the parliament’s 120 seats, with up to 57 for a center-left alliance.
Despite their rivalry, Netanyahu and Gantz had only narrow differences on key issues during their campaigns, meaning that even if Netanyahu was to stand down after five terms in office, significant changes in the Tel Aviv regime’s policies on relations with the United States, the standoff with Iran or the Palestinian conflict would most likely remain unchanged.
Once all the votes are counted, Israeli President Reuven Rivlin will meet with the parties that won seats and will ultimately give one party leader up to 42 days to form a government.
The deadlock has turned the regime’s former minister of military affairs Avigdor Lieberman, who is now head of the far-right Yisrael Beitenu party which has eight seats, as a key influence in the coalition-building process.
Lieberman remained open to the idea of a secular unity government but said Thursday that he was unconvinced by Netanyahu’s unity offer.
In a statement, he called Netanyahu’s offer “no more than a trick and an attempt to paint a false picture to prepare public opinion for a third round of elections.”
Lieberman resigned from Netanyahu’s cabinet earlier this year and has become one of his firm critics ever since.
Source: Presstv




















20, September 2019
Revealed: Biya regime behind woman “buried alive in a shallow grave” in Momo County 0
French Cameroun army soldiers deployed to Southern Cameroons were behind the “barbaric” murder of a woman in the Momo County, Cameroon Intelligence Report sources in the northern zone have confirmed. The troops loyal to the desperate regime in Yaoundé have carried out several raids in Momo, Menchum and Bui County that have left a host of innocent civilians dead or injured over the past week.
Our chief correspondent in Bamenda, Sama Ernest hinted that a lot of the casualties that are civilians are not a mistake but from decisions that are made in Yaoundé by senior Beti Ewondo military barons. A Roman Catholic priest serving with the Bamenda Ecclesiastic Province who spoke to us but sued for anonymity observed that there are many situations in which the French Cameroun army soldiers do knowingly target Southern Cameroons civilians.
Cameroon Intelligence Report understands that Defense Minister Beti Assomo, Minister- Secretary General at the presidency, Ferdinand Ngoh Ngoh and Minister Paul Atanga Nji are very much in charge of deciding whether or not Yaoundé would stop its troops from killing innocent Southern Cameroons civilians and that President Biya has “no say” since senior military officers are enjoying financial gains from the war in Southern Cameroons.
Speaking to our Yaoundé city reporter on Monday, a senior member of Prof Maurice Kamto’s MRC party who hails from the Centre Region noted that “The elephant in the room not being discussed is the tremendous financial gain that is being made by the military hierarchy in this so-called Anglophone crisis”
Thousands of French Cameroun troops are in Southern Cameroons, allegedly to fight Ambazonia Restoration Forces.
French Cameroun’s fifty-seven year rule over Southern Cameroons came to an end following the declaration of independence by the jailed Ambazonia leader, President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe but three years on, Yaounde is still seeking a military solution to the crisis with the Southern Cameroons Interim Government who still controls large swathes of territory.
The Ambazonia leader including Vice President Dabney Yerima have so far rejected a proposal to lay down arms and instead called on the UN and the African Union to send in an international fact finding mission to end the use of force in Southern Cameroons. The Ambazonia Interim Government also insists that the so-called Biya national dialogue cannot move ahead until all Southern Cameroonians are released from French Cameroun detention centers and prisons.
According to the United Nations, nearly 3,000 civilians have been killed or wounded and some 50,000 Southern Cameroonians are now refugees in Nigeria.
By Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai with files from Sama Ernest and Rita Akana