Ember Moon Possibly Out Of WWE NXT TakeOver: Chicago Title Match

The WWE NXT Women’s Title Match at TakeOver: Chicago may be changing from a previously advertised fatal-four way to a triple threat match.
Ember Moon is no longer on advertisements for the pay-per-vew in Chicago on Saturday, May 20. A recent Twitter post by WWE star Natalya at the WWE Performance Center seemingly confirmed rumors Moon was injured in a recent match because Moon was shown wearing a sling. She took an awkward fall and hit a barricade during the No. 1 contender match.
The match will likely be NXT Women’s Champ Asuka versus Nikki Cross versus Ruby Riot.

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Spanish PM signs deal to govern with Left-wing Podemos party, breaking coalition deadlock

Pedro Sánchez, Spain’s acting prime minister and Socialist party leader, signed a coalition deal with the leader of the hard-Left Podemos party on Tuesday, still leaving the partners short of enough seats to form a government after Sunday’s election. 

Mr Sánchez, who failed to reach agreement with Podemos after winning a general election in April, embraced its leader Pablo Iglesias after signing the agreement, saying a 10-point document was the basis for a “progressive government for a complete legislature”.

Mr Sánchez’s PSOE won the most votes, but did not pick up enough seats to govern alone. 

Referring to the stunning rise of the hard-Right Vox party, which finished third in Sunday’s repeat election, Mr Iglesias described the deal with PSOE as a “vaccine against the extreme Right”.

“What was an opportunity in April is now a duty,” Mr Iglesias said after Vox won 52 seats in Congress out of 350.  

Spanish general election results

PSOE and Podemos held talks in the summer over a coalition government, but failed to reach agreement, even though Podemos accepted the condition that Mr Iglesias would not be given a cabinet post. 

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Under Tuesday’s agreement, it is understood that Mr Iglesias would become deputy prime minister, but with PSOE and Podemos 21 seats shy of a majority, the route to enacting the accord remains fraught with difficulties in a fragmented parliament made up of 16 parties. 

The leader of the conservative Popular Party, Pablo Casado, said his 88 MPs would not agree to a “radical Left” government.

A statement by the centrist Ciudadanos also ruled out offering its support, although the party could still choose to abstain. 

If Ciudadanos were to join the PP and Vox in voting against Mr Sánchez, the Socialist leader would have to seek support – albeit in the form of an abstention – from one of the Catalan separatist parties.

Supporters of independence for Catalonia have mounted a series of protests and roadblocks since nine of their leaders were sentenced to prison a month ago for the holding of an unlawful referendum, while the region’s former president, Carles Puigdemont, moved to Belgium to avoid arrest.

The agreement signed in Congress on Tuesday stresses the importance of boosting employment, public services and pensions, but is vague on the issue of Catalonia, promising only to “seek formulas for understanding strictly within the Constitution”.

Laura Borràs, spokeswoman for Mr Puigdemont’s Together for Catalonia party, ruled out any assistance for Mr Sánchez “as long as there are prisoners and exiles, and the right-to self-determination is not accepted”.

But sources from the Catalan Republican Left party led by Oriol Junqueras, who is serving a 13-year sentence for sedition, were less adamant.

“We want to be asked for our support and for a conversation to start before we get to the next level of what we are supporting,” a source close to Mr Junqueras told The Telegraph.

‘Isil will return in Iraq’, warns former counter-terrorism commander

Western governments must help put out the “fire” of the Kurdistan crisis before the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant regroups, a senior Kurdish leader has warned. 

Bafel Talabani, a former commander of Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga counter-terrorism forces and son of the late Iraqi president Jalal Talabani, said that celebrating the defeat of the terror group was “simplistic” and called on Britain to negotiate an end to a months-long confrontation between Iraqi and Kurdish forces previously allied in the fight against the terror group.  

“Daesh is not gone. That issue is not defeated," Mr Talabani said, using the Arabic acronym for the group. "All you will see is asymmetrical warfare increase – they will stir up racial hatreds and terrorism will increase.” 

Bafel Talabani released a video message to the people of Kurdistan on October 12Credit:
Rudaw

“There is always this thing. It never goes away. It comes back with a different name harder and harder and harder. And Daesh is not finished in the slightest,” he said in an exclusive interview with the Telegraph. 

“I am in London to persuade the international community to help start negotiations between the Kurdish regional government and  Baghdad as soon as possible – before the situation deteriorates,” he added. “We have to put this fire out to move the country forward.”

The fire he refers to was ignited on September 25, when Masoud Barzani, the then president of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG)and a political rival of Mr Talabani’s family and party, called a referendum on full independence from Iraq. 

Kurdistan had operated as a de facto autonomous region since the Iraq war of 2003, and the outcome of the vote was a foregone conclusion – over 90 percent of ballots cast voted yes.

But the move provoked near universal condemnation in the international community and sparked a confrontation with Baghdad that culminated with Iraqi troops and allied Shia militia groups storming into disputed areas in mid-October. 

Isil military parade near Tel Afar, near Mosul, in IraqCredit:
AP

In a few days, the Iraqi Kurds lost swathes of territory including the city of Kirkuk and key oil fields that they had controlled since the US and British invasion of Iraq in 2003.  

Mr Talabani believes the episode set the cause of Kurdish independence back at least a decade. 

A month on, the KRG’s status as the kernel of a future independent Kurdistan is in the balance. 

Direct international flights into Erbil, the capital, remain suspended. Kirkuk, a city the Kurds see as integral to a future state and had controlled since 2003, is under the control of the Baghdad government; and several thousand families have been left homeless in what has been described as an emerging humanitarian crisis. 

The loss of key oil fields has left the region to the brink of economic collapse. The government in Erbil has already run out of money to pay wages this month, Mr Talabani said. 

In a meeting with Alastair Burt, the foreign office minister for the Middle East, he called on Britain to push Baghdad to share oil revenues with the region – preferably the full 17 percent of oil revenues the KRG is guaranteed in the Iraqi constitution. 

Iraqi Kurds wave flags and chant slogans during a protest outside the US Consulate on October 21, 2017 in Erbil, Iraq.Credit:
Getty

“Everything else can be discussed in detail as part of a grander solution. But we need the wages to be taken care of, people need wages,” he said.  

“Its not fair to starve the Kurdish people for the political mistakes of certain politicians.”

Born in Baghdad but raised in Britain, Mr Talabani has emerged as something of a Western face both for the cause for Kurdish independence, and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), the party his family founded.

The scion of an Iraqi Kurdish political dynasty, he headed an anti-terrorism unit of Peshmerga fighters he was involved in intelligence and counter-insurgency warfare alongside American troops for much of the 2000s. 

He went on to serve as chief of staff to his father, and has since emerged as a kind of roving statesman who delights in telling tales of delicate meetings and frantic telephone diplomacy with a who’s who of Middle Eastern and international figures.

Mr Talabani insists he holds no grudge against the international community. Everyone, from London and Washington to Tehran and Baghdad, had been “crystal clear” about the consequences of the referendum. 

“All the cards were on the table and you told us this would happen. If you hadn’t told us, I would have called them a betrayal. But everyone told us what would happen,” he said.

Instead, he levels much of his criticism at the Kurdish leadership – including, he judiciously adds, in his own party – for bullheadedness and division. 

Kurdish security forces withdraw from a checkpoint in Alton Kupri, on the outskirts of Irbil, Iraq, Friday Oct. 20Credit:
AFP

And he reserves particular ire for a number of foreign consultants and advisers who he says pushed Mr Barzani into a “massive error.”

Mr Talabani also claims the Kurdish leadership ignored an 11th hour deal he negotiated with the Americans, who, he said, agreed to endorse an independence referendum if it was postponed two years so as not to interfere with the fight against Isil or Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi’s chances of winning elections in 2018. 

Mr Talabani flatly denies allegations against himself and some other Kurdish commanders of cowardice or complicity in the military disaster that followed the referendum. 

“It was a simple mathematical problem,” he said. “There were x amount of vehicles that needed y number of this weapon system to defeat, and we didn’t have enough of those weapon systems.”

“And I told them before the fighting, ‘please at least take care of this.’ And I was told: ‘the Peshmerga are brave.’”

“Well, the Peshmerga are brave. But there’s not much I can do with bravery against a tank,” he said. 

He said it should serve as a wake-up call to bury historic divisions, including between his own family and Mr Barzani’s, which dominates the ruling Kurdistan Democratic Party. The two parties fought a civil war in the 1990s. 

“We need to get our house in order first. We need a united Kurdish voice,” he said. 

“If we lose the Kurdistan region as a region, if Iraq divides us and starts playing us governate for governate, frankly it doesn’t matter who is in charge of what.”

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Rusev Tweets Anger With Shane McMahon, May Appear On SmackDown

The Bulgarian Brute took to Twitter on Tuesday to let Shane McMahon know of his dissatisfaction.
Rusev said in a video he wouldn’t hesitate to make an appearance at SmackDown Live to get the answer to his demand for a shot at the WWE Championship at Money In The Bank. The injured heel star hasn’t made an in-ring appearance yet on SmackDown since changing shows in the Superstar Shakeup.
Here’s a link to the video:

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