Survey: Religious leader and President of Pakistan
get lowest ratingBy Rana Fawad
Posted
July 02, 2009
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WASHINGTON: Guess who emerged the least
popular in Pakistan's leadership contest: a
religious leader and President of Pakistan.
According to the WorldPublicOpinion.org's
recent survey findings released yesterday, Maulana
Sufi Muhammad of TNSM (a religious party) was
favored by only 18 percent of Pakistanis. He is not
far behind from the head of the state: President of
Pakistan Asif Ali Zardari got 32 percent favorable
opinions.
Another political leader and head of the Pakistan
Muslim League (N), Nawaz Sharif got 87 percent favorable opinion,
Iftikhar Chaudhry (Chief Justice Pakistan Supreme
Court) was favored by 82 percent people, and Prime
Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani got 80 percent.
Majority of the Pakistanis, 81 percent, has
negative opinion of the Taliban and religious
militants and support the government action against
them. In 2007, only 34 percent had negative opinion
about them.
This was revealed by the WorldPublicOpinion.org
during the release of its survey 'Pakistani Public
Opinion on the Swat Conflict, Afghanistan, and the
U.S.' at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace on Wednesday.
The WorldPublicOpinion.org is project
managed by the program on International Policy
Attitudes at the University of Maryland.
Stephen J. Weber, Chief Operating Officer WPO,
moderated the discussion.
Clay Ramsay, Research Director, Program on
International Policy Attitudes (PIPA) and
WorldPublicOpinion.org and C. Christine Fair,
Senior Political Scientist, RAND Corporation;
Assistant Professor, Georgetown University,
presented the findings of the survey. Dr. Fair also
collaborated on the development of the survey.
Dr. Stephen Cohen, Brookings Institution Senior
Fellow in Foreign Policy Studies and author (most
recently) of Four Crises and a Peace Process:
American Engagement in South Asia (2007) and
The Idea of Pakistan (2004), also took part
in the discussion.
The survey was carried out from May 17 to 28,
2009 by the Social Economic Development Consultants
(SEDCO), Islamabad, Pakistan. Questions were asked
face-to-face in respondents' home. The pool of
respondents consisted of 1,000 persons across 100
primary sampling units.
According to the survey findings, 71 percent
Pakistanis believe that the Taliban will not accept
the same Shari'a courts they (the Taliban) are
demanding if those courts are empowered to try
Taliban members as well.
Seventy-five percent people said a full takeover
of the country by the Taliban will be very bad or
somewhat bad.
As for the questions, who will do the better job
in providing effective and timely justice,
preventing corruption, and helping the poor, the
majority said the Pakistani government would do a
better job.
Seventy-five percent respondents of the survey
said shari'a allows women to work whereas 10 percent
said the Taliban allowed women to work.
Similarly, 83 percent people believe shari'a
allows girls to attend school whereas only 12
percent think Taliban allow girls to get education.
However, NATO mission in Afghanistan, U.S.
government and President Obama got unfavorable
opinion.
Eighty-eight percent think the U.S. government
wants to weaken and divide the Islamic world and 90
percent believe Obama intends to do the same.
Eighty-two percent people are of the opinion that
al Qaeda is a threat to Pakistan's interests whereas
74 percent think that al Qaeda should not be allowed
to operate training camps in Pakistan.
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