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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bilow who wrote (49247)10/3/2002 11:46:20 PM
From: Eashoa' M'sheekha  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
NEW SURVEY: SURPRISING POTENTIAL FOR NON-VIOLENT INTIFADA

( Non - Violence --- What a novel idea !-- <GGG>

Two years into the Intifada, groundbreaking survey reveals:
80% of Palestinians would support a large-scale non-violent protest movement and56% would participate in its activities.

78% of Israeli Jews believe that the Palestinians have a legitimate right to seek a Palestinian state, provided that they use non-violent means.

Jerusalem, August 28, 2002 ¡V Search for Common Ground (SFCG), the world¡¦s largest conflict
prevention and resolution NGO, today released a survey conducted by the Program on
International Policy Attitudes (PIPA) of the University of Maryland to determine, for the first
time, the attitudes Palestinians and Jewish Israelis publics on the potential for nonviolent methods
in the Palestinian Intifada. A Palestinian polling organization, the Jerusalem Media and
Communications Center (JMCC), carried out the poll of 600 Palestinians through face-to-face
interviews from August 12-19. An Israeli polling organization, the B.L. and Lucille Cohen
Institute for Public Opinion Research of Tel Aviv University, carried out the poll of 504 Israeli
Jews by telephone interviews from August 12-14. The key findings are as follows:
A strong majority (62%) of Palestinians thinks that a new approach is needed in the
Intifada and overwhelming majorities (73-92%) approve of Palestinians using various
methods of nonviolent action. Pluralities to majorities of Palestinians express willingness to
participate in various specific nonviolent actions, including boycotts and forms of mass civil
disobedience¡Xnumbers that, if actually mobilized, would amount to hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians. If a Palestinian were killed in the course of committing nonviolent resistance, a near
unanimous 88% would regard that person as a martyr--in most cases, no less than a suicide
bomber. However, concurrent with their strong support for nonviolent methods, Palestinians
show equal levels of support for violent methods.
On the Israeli side, an overwhelming 78% of Israeli Jews questioned believe that the
Palestinians have a legitimate right to seek a Palestinian state, provided that they use
nonviolent means. Likewise 56% feel this way about the Palestinians¡¦ right to oppose the
expansion of the settlements. If the Palestinians were to move from violent to nonviolent forms
of protest, a majority of Israeli Jews would favor making concessions to the Palestinians,
including phasing out the checkpoints between Palestinian towns (70%) and being more flexible
in negotiations about the borders of a future Palestinian state¡Xas high as 58%.
- 30 -
Eight out of ten Palestinians said they would approve of a large-scale Palestinian movement
based on nonviolent action against Israeli occupation using such methods as demonstrations,
boycotts, and civil disobedience, and more than half (56%) said they would be willing to
participate in it. A majority of Israeli Jews (57%) said they would approve of such a
movement. About two-thirds said the Israeli government should not try to stop Palestinians from
organizing large nonviolent demonstrations.
An overwhelming majority of Palestinians favors the idea of all Palestinians refusing to
work in the construction of settlements, or for businesses located in the settlements. Among
Israeli Jews, a strong majority believes that the Israeli government should not crack down harshly
on efforts to organize strikes and work stoppages of Palestinian workers in the settlements, but a
majority says that the Israeli government should crack down if large groups block construction
activity in the settlements or block access to the settlements.
Both Palestinians and Israeli Jews are unsure about the feasibility of a large-scale
nonviolent movement. While Palestinian support for mass nonviolent action is strong,
majorities have doubts about whether it would be effective. Among Israeli Jews, an
overwhelming majority thinks it unlikely that a nonviolent movement will emerge.
¡§We believe these findings reflect the real, but unrealized, potential that non-violence can
play in ending the vicious cycle of bloodshed,¡¨ says John Marks, President SFCG. ¡§While
non-violence could provide a possible way out, unfortunately, it is not yet seen by most
people in both societies as feasible.¡¨
Search for Common Ground (SFCG) was founded in 1982 and is a Washington and Brusselsbased
NGO, with offices in 13 countries. It is the world¡¦s largest conflict prevention and
resolution NGO. SFCG has worked in the Middle East for the past 11 years. Its activities include
the Common Ground News Service, the Bulletin of Regional Cooperation in the Middle East, and
scores of meetings to promote dialogue and joint action among specialists from across the region
involved in the fields of security, media, civil society and conflict resolution.
The Program on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA) is a joint program of the Center on
Policy Attitudes (COPA) and the Center for International and Security Studies at Maryland
(CISSM) School of Public Affairs, University of Maryland. PIPA was created to help bridge the
gap between various publics and policymaking communities on international issues. Drawing on
its own data and comprehensive reviews of data from other organizations, PIPA researchers
analyze the patterns of majority opinion, looking to identify the potential for public consensus on
international policy issues.
The Jerusalem Media and Communications Center (JMCC) is the first institution in the Arab
world to conduct public opinion surveys methodologically and continuously. The main aim of
those regular opinion polls is to enhance public participation in the decision-making process by
making the results available to decision makers, and, also to enable academics, researchers and
others to use scientifically collected data in their studies and policy projects.
The B.L. & Lucille Cohen Institute for Public Opinion Research is the only public opinion
research institute located in a university setting in Israel. As such, it is charged with the task of
pursuing theoretical and methodological capabilities that will contribute to the study of attitudes
and opinions in Israeli society. Its objectives are to develop a survey program on attitudes
concerning Israeli polity and society; assemble trend information in order to follow the dynamics
of public opinion in Israel; and experiment with survey methodology in order to improve survey
techniques.