RNA - According to the responses of the 1,270 Palestinians polled by PSR, 64 percent want Abbas to resign, while only 32 percent sad they wanted him to remain president. In the Gaza Strip, the number of respondents who called for Abbas’ resignation soared to 72 percent, Palestinian news outlet Ma'an reported.
In the wake of Fatah’s seventh conference, a majority of respondents expressed dissatisfaction regarding the outcome of the Palestinian Authority (PA) ruling party’s congress.
Only 33 percent said they were satisfied with the decision to reappoint Abbas at the head of the party, with 57 percent of respondents saying they were dissatisfied.
Furthermore, 48 percent did not believe that Abbas’ new mandate as Fatah chairman would consolidate his legitimacy as president of the Palestinian Authority or head of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO).
Regarding a recent wave of fires in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory, which a number of right-wing Israeli officials blamed on Palestinians, 73 percent said that they believe that the fires were natural disasters, while 12 percent thought they were arson committed by Palestinians.
Meanwhile, 85 percent of those polled said that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s claims that Palestinians were behind the fires amounted to anti-Palestinian incitement, and a further 87 percent said that a bill being debated by the Israeli Knesset to ban the use of loudspeakers for the Muslim call to prayer in Israel was a sign that the Israeli government was waging a war against Islam.
Regarding the US presidential elections in November, those polled had a dismal view of the achievements of outgoing President Barack Obama regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, with 83 percent saying that he had not made serious efforts to resolve the conflict.
However, 53 percent said they wanted US President-Elect Donald Trump to stay out of the peace process, with a further 30 percent saying they wanted him to play a strong role, and another 10 percent stating that they wanted him to maintain the same role as the outgoing administration.
PSR reported a sharp increase in the number of respondents who stated that they believed the two-state solution was no longer viable, jumping from 56 percent three months ago to 65 percent now, with only 31 percent remaining confident that it was still feasible. A further 62 percent said they supported abandoning the Oslo Accords.
A little over half of respondents, 54 percent, believe that Israel’s long term goal was to fully annex the occupied Palestinian territory and expel its Palestinian inhabitants, as nearly three quarters, 73 percent, said they were worried of being hurt by Israel or that their lands and homes would be confiscated or demolished.
A whopping 76 percent thought PA institutions were corrupt, and only 36 percent thought Palestinians in the West Bank could criticize the Palestinian Authority without fear of repercussions.
Meanwhile, 11 percent in the Gaza Strip had a positive view of general living conditions, while 31 percent of respondents answered positively in the West Bank.
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