The submarine affair
The government will not vote tomorrow on the establishment of a commission of inquiry into the submarine affair
Against the background of reports of contacts for a plea deal with former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the proposal will not be raised at a cabinet meeting tomorrow.
The reason: Due to the schedules, it will not be possible for the ministers to have enough time to review the proposal.
In the coming week, a defense procurement deal with Germany is due to be signed
His dew
15/01/2022
Saturday, 15 January 2022, 21:27 Updated: 21:33
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In the video: Ganz submits to the government the proposal to a committee of inquiry into the submarine affair (Photo: Ministry of Defense)
The government will not vote tomorrow (Sunday) on the proposal to establish a parliamentary inquiry committee into the submarine affair, despite the announcement by Defense Minister Bnei Gantz and Deputy Prime Minister Yair Lapid that the proposal will be approved this week.
In recent days, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett has given the green light to promoting the proposal, which Ganz submitted as early as the end of October, after months of delays, amid reports of contacts for a plea deal with former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. However, in the end, the proposal will not be raised at a cabinet meeting tomorrow, on the grounds of schedules, and that there will not be enough time for ministers to review the proposal.
In addition, a defense procurement deal with Germany is due to be signed in the coming week, and the prime minister wanted to make sure that the approval of the offer would not hurt the signing of the deal.
The Defense Minister's Office said that there was no problem in raising the proposal since it had already been published in the media, and still wanted to bring the proposal for approval at the next cabinet meeting.
But in the end the government secretariat decided not to add the decision to the agenda on the grounds that ministers were not given enough time to review the decision materials.
More on Walla!
The government will on Sunday approve the establishment of a state commission of inquiry into the submarine affair
To the full article
The offer will be rejected.
Ganz (Photo: Flash 90, Avshalom Sasson)
Ganz has been trying to promote the establishment of a state commission of inquiry since the first week of the government's formation, but for many months the move has been delayed in the face of opposition from Yemina and Bennett.
During this period, members of the Movement for Quality of Government, accompanied by a group of former senior security officials, held numerous meetings with senior government officials, including Justice Minister Gideon Saar and Prime Minister Bennett, in an attempt to advance the investigation and dissolve objections.
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The submarine affair