2021-09-23 Israel-Palestine-Jordan
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Poll: Nearly 80% of Palestinians want Mahmoud Abbas to resign
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[IsraelTimes] Hamas, a regional Iranian catspaw, sees a slight drop in support, but remains more popular than its Fatah rivals; majority of Paleostinians approve of confidence-building measures between Israel, PA.
Some 78 percent of Paleostinians want to see long-ruling Paleostinian Authority President the ineffectual Mahmoud Abbas
...aka Abu Mazen, a graduate of the prestigious unaccredited Patrice Lumumba University in Moscow with a doctorate in Holocaust Denial. While no Yasser Arafat, he has his own brand of evil, just a little more lowercase....
step down, according to a Paleostinian public opinion survey released on Tuesday.
Continued from Page 2
The survey was conducted by Khalil Shikaki, a veteran Paleostinian pollster who directs the Paleostinian Center for Survey and Policy Research. According to Shikaki, 1,270 Paleostinian adults were interviewed for the survey across the West Bank and Gazoo
...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with an iron fist by Hamaswith about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppression and disproportionate response ...
between September 15 and 18.
"This is the highest number we have seen calling for Abbas’s resignation since Abbas’s election," Shikaki said in a phone call.
Abbas was elected to a four-year term in 2005 in a vote boycotted by his Hamas rivals. No national elections have been held in the intervening decade and a half, despite numerous pledges by the Paleostinian leadership.
In mid-March, 68% of Paleostinians demanded Abbas’s resignation, according to an earlier poll by Shikaki. But the Paleostinian Authority has increasingly struggled to assert its legitimacy among Paleostinians, many of whom see Ramallah as corrupt and ineffective at realizing their dream of an independent state.
Abbas pledged to finally hold parliamentary and presidential elections in January after 15 years of political stasis. But in late April, Abbas indefinitely delayed the vote, blaming alleged Israeli intransigence. Observers, however, said Abbas likely feared electoral defeat following internal divisions in his Fatah movement.
Hamas saw relatively low support during the aborted electoral campaign earlier this year. But the terror group, which rules the Gaza Strip, saw its popularity skyrocket following its May battle with Israel. Ramallah was largely sidelined during the escalation, which also saw mass protests in the West Bank.
In a poll conducted by Shikaki’s institute in early June, 53% of Paleostinians said that Hamas deserved to "represent and lead the Paleostinian people." Just 14% said that Abbas’s Fatah movement should do so.
In Wednesday’s survey, however, Hamas’s popularity dropped, with only 45% saying the terror group deserved to represent and lead Paleostinians. Around 19% said that Fatah and Abbas ought to have that role, while 28% said that neither side deserved it.
In recent weeks, Israeli officials have openly spoken about strengthening the PA as it faces a growing economic and political crisis at home. Some Paleostinians have expressed skepticism of such "confidence-building measures," while right-wing Israelis have charged that the policies are unnecessary gifts to an intransigent Ramallah.
According to Shikaki’s survey, a majority of Paleostinians — 56% — view such measures positively, while 35% views them negatively.
Abbas’s PA has also been struggling to reinforce its legitimacy among Paleostinians following the death of anti-PA activist Nizar Banat, which sparked rare protests calling for Abbas’s resignation.
Banat, who frequently assailed Ramallah’s leadership on social media, died following a PA raid on his Hebron hideout in early June. PA premier Mohammad Shtayyeh vowed to get to the bottom of Banat’s death, and 14 PA officers were later charged for beating him to death.
The demonstrations rarely saw more than several hundred people take to the streets of Ramallah. But they were brutally suppressed by PA officers, who arrested peaceful demonstrators and smashed the cameras of journalists seeking to document the scenes, drawing international criticism.
According to Shikaki’s polling, 74% of Paleostinians viewed the arrests as a violation of the demonstrators’ rights.
The 14 security officers who participated in Banat’s arrest in late July were ultimately charged. The first hearing in their trial had been set to be held last week, but was delayed after the officers’ lawyer failed to show up.
No security bigshots or politicians were indicted, leading the Banat family to denounce the process as show. According to Shikaki’s poll, some 63% of the Paleostinian public believes that senior PA officials ordered Banat’s death, and only 22% believe it was a mistake.
Another 69% view the steps taken to ensure accountability following Banat’s death as insufficient.
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Posted by trailing wife 2021-09-23 02:16||
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Posted by SteveS 2021-09-23 02:32||
2021-09-23 02:32||
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