Palestinians pessimistic on peace
RAMALLAH : A majority of Palestinians believe the US will fail to
revive the Middle East peace process, according to a survey after Barack
Obama's visit to the region, seen by AFP on Tuesday.
The Palestinian Centre for Policy and Survey Research's report,
conducted March 28-30, surveyed 1,270 people in the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip.
"Fifty-five percent believe that the US administration will not
succeed in reviving the peace process and bringing the two sides to the
negotiating table," it concluded.
"Moreover, 70 percent believe that the American administration will
not succeed in pressuring Israel to freeze settlement construction," it
added, in a reference to Palestinian demands for a cessation of Jewish
settlement building before any talks can be held.
"Fifty-six percent believe that the two-state solution is no longer
practical due to settlement expansion," the report said.
Meanwhile, 71 percent of Palestinians were pessimistic about
Washington's move to unblock $500 million in aid to Abbas's Palestinian
Authority, saying it was not enough to address its current financial
woes.
And the report also found a dramatic drop in the number of people
optimistic that Gaza's Hamas rulers could reconcile their differences
with Abbas's rival Fatah movement.
"Percentage of optimism about the chances for reunification of the
West Bank and the Gaza Strip drops sharply from 39 percent three months
ago to 18 percent in this poll," it said.
AFP
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