Friday, March 22, 2024

Public Opinion Poll: 'Palestinians' Support Oct. 7 Terrorist Invasion, Majority Say Hamas Committed No Atrocities


Palestinians support Oct. 7 terrorist invasion, say Hamas committed no atrocities



Further debunking the notion that Hamas alone is the problem and that it is an unsupported fringe movement, a Palestinian public opinion poll published on Wednesday again revealed that most Palestinians remain pleased with the October 7, 2023 terrorist invasion of southern Israel.

Despite the death and destruction visited upon Gaza as a consequence of Hamas’s actions, 71 percent of Palestinians surveyed said it was “correct” for Hamas to have massacred over 1,200 Israeli men, women and children, and taken another 253 hostage on the final day of Sukkot last year.

The poll was conducted by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research (PCPSR) among a representative sampling of Palestinian Arabs in both Gaza and the so-called “West Bank” (Judea and Samaria).

A shockingly-low 5 percent of Palestinians said Hamas committed atrocities, or war crimes, in its onslaught on southern Israel.

Even among those Palestinians who have watched video evidence of what Hamas terrorists did to Israelis on Oct. 7, 81 percent still do not believe any atrocities were committed. It is unclear from the results if the Palestinians believe the video evidence to be fake, or if they do not consider the rape, torture, mutilation and burning alive of Israelis to be especially egregious. It should be remembered that the Middle East is a very different region with very different sensibilities to most of the West. What might be considered an atrocity in the West might be a rather common occurrence in the Middle East, and thus not particularly troubling.

Israel insists that Hamas cannot continue to govern in the Gaza Strip, or anywhere else. Not if there is to ever be a chance for genuine peace. Initially, the United States and other Western governments supported this position, but have of late been pushing for a ceasefire that would ultimately leave Hamas in charge.

And that’s what the Palestinians themselves want.

Support for Hamas hovers around 35 percent in both Gaza and the “West Bank.” Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah party enjoys just 26 percent support in Gaza and a record-low 12 percent in the “West Bank.” In other words, if and when Palestinian elections are held, Hamas will come out on top.

In the new survey, 52 percent of respondents in Gaza said they want Hamas to rule the territory in the future. In Judea and Samaria, 64 percent of Palestinians think Hamas should continue to govern Gaza, if not the entirety of the Palestinian-controlled territories.

Just 21 percent of Gazans want to see Abbas and his regime take control of Gaza.


Reaction to Hamas massacre shows lessons of Holocaust not learned, Czech envoy says

JNS

The inability to differentiate between the attacker and the defender is absolutely stunning,” Ambassador Veronika Kuchynova Smigolova tells JNS.

The outburst of antisemitism across the West following the Hamas massacre on Oct. 7 and the world’s inability to clearly differentiate between the attacker and the victim indicates that the lessons of the Holocaust have not been learned, the Czech ambassador to Israel said on Wednesday.

“I was very surprised how soon after October 7 this eruption of antisemitism came even before the Israeli military operation in Gaza began,” Ambassador Veronika Kuchynova Smigolova told JNS in an interview. “I had thought that classic antisemitism was much weaker than it is.”

The envoy from one of Israel’s staunchest allies in Europe said she remains dumbfounded by the world’s reaction to the invasion that triggered the five-month-old war against Hamas in Gaza, which quickly focused on the plight of Palestinians in the Strip.

The ambassador said that she was particularly shocked by how under-reported the sexual crimes of Hamas were, and the international community’s belated and minimalistic response to the attacks, including women’s groups and the United Nations.

“It looks like nobody wanted to see that,” she said.

Kuchynova Smigolova, who previously served as deputy foreign minister, said that a largely uninformed and uninterested European public was being influenced by a strong anti-Israel slant in the media, several major anti-Israeli countries in Europe, senior E.U. leaders and the ignorant voices of uneducated youth at universities.

“I hope that what happened after October 7 with the denial [of the massacre] and the antisemitism will be a wake-up call for many governments in the West to start with education, not only about the Holocaust and antisemitism but about the creation of the State of Israel and the indigenous connection of the Jewish people,” she said.


No comments: