86 per cent think Pakistan headed in wrong direction

The direction perhaps will never be changed due to bondage with Uncle Sam and threat of jehadis to change the system. Thanks to Mush. The country will continue to be a slave country whose leaders would be puppets, only thinking of their own material advantage and kiss a$$ their masters. Major looser will be PPP. Bad omen for the country.

86 per cent think Pakistan headed in wrong direction -DAWN - Top Stories; July 18, 2008

86 per cent think Pakistan headed in wrong direction

By Amir Wasim

ISLAMABAD, July 17: An overwhelming majority of Pakistanis believe that the country is moving in a wrong direction and want the government to immediately impeach President Pervez Musharraf.

According to the findings of a survey, conducted by the US-based International Republican Institute (IRI) between June 1 and 15, about 86 per cent of the respondents believe that Pakistan is heading in a wrong direction while only 12 per cent think the direction is right.

The randomly selected sample consisted of 3,484 adult men and women from 223 rural and 127 urban areas in 50 districts of the four provinces. This is the first survey carried out by any international organisation since the installation of the PPP-led coalition government after the February 18 polls.

According to the survey, 83 per cent of the respondents want the new government to remove Gen (retd) Musharraf from presidency. A majority of 67 per cent people said they supported the election of nuclear scientist Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan as the country’s next president while 15 per cent said they did not.

With the decline in Mr Musharraf’s popularity and after the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif has emerged as the most popular leader in the country, with 82 per cent saying they like him and only six per cent saying they do not. This is up from 36 per cent in June 2006, when he trailed both Mr Musharraf and Ms Bhutto. Likewise, Mr Sharif easily dominated the ‘best leader for Pakistan’ category, being the choice of 38 per cent, leaving the competition far behind. Interestingly, Dr A.Q. Khan is at number two (with 76pc) and deposed chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry and Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif sharing the third position (with 65pc) on the list of favourite personalities.

The poll found that President Musharraf’s job approval rating had dropped significantly. Only 11 per cent said they approved of his performance while an all-time high of 75 per cent saying they did not.

In the IRI’s June 2006 poll, President Musharraf was the most popular leader in the country, with 52 per cent saying they liked him. In the June 2008 poll, only nine per cent said they liked the president.

When asked which one leader was the best person to handle the country’s problems, President Musharraf was the choice of only three per cent.

When asked if they thought President Musharraf should resign, an all-time high of 85 per cent answered in the affirmative, up 10 points from the last poll. In addition, 79 per cent said they would feel better about the future of the country if Musharraf was out of office.

Likewise, Musharraf’s allies also find themselves in an unpopular position. Only eight per cent of the respondents said they liked PML-Q leaders Pervez Ilahi and Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain.

When asked to rate various institutions, 85 per cent said they had a favourable impression of the government, making it the most popular institution. This is in sharp contrast to the 29 per cent rating that the previous government had received.

When asked how had the government performed on issues important to them, 41 per cent responded positively and 51 per cent negatively. Despite the fact that a majority rated the government’s performance as poor, this represents a significant drop from the last rating achieved by the old government.

In the February poll, 80 per cent rated the old government’s performance poorly while only 18 per cent rated it positively.

When asked if they felt that things would get better in Pakistan now that there is a new government, 52 per cent replied yes and 20 per cent said no.

When asked about their personal economic condition over the past year, 12 per cent said it had improved, 72 per cent said it had worsened and 16 per cent said it had remained the same. When asked if they felt their economic wellbeing would improve or worsen during the coming year, 19 per cent said it would improve, 46 per cent said it would worsen and 21 per cent felt it would remain the same.

When asked to choose their most important issue from a list, 71 per cent cited inflation, 13 per cent unemployment and five per cent poverty. This represents a total of 89 per cent of the population citing economic concerns as their top priority.

Pakistanis are also unambiguous when it comes to restoration of the deposed judges. Eighty-three per cent said they wanted the judges to be reinstated. When asked how important this issue was to them, 86 per cent described it as important.

WAR ON TERROR: In the last poll, conducted in the wake of both Ms Bhutto’s assassination and some suicide bombings, 12 per cent selected terrorism as their top issue and six per cent law and order. In the June poll, however, the issue barely resonated; two per cent cited suicide bombings and less than one per cent chose Al Qaeda as a top concern.

While 61 per cent said they felt that religious extremism was a serious problem in the country (down 12 per cent), only 45 per cent said Al Qaeda and the Taliban were a serious concern, a 20 point drop since February and an all-time low since the IRI started asking the question last September.

Further, the number supporting the army fighting in the NWFP and tribal areas dropped six points to 27 per cent.

When it comes to solutions for combating extremism and terrorism, the poll reveals that the Pakistani people are unambiguous, preferring negotiations and development to military options. When asked if they supported political dialogue with extremists, 71 per cent responded yes while 65 per cent said they supported a peace deal.

When asked what they thought was the most effective way to deal with terrorism, 61 per cent said economic development and education, nine per cent said military force and 24 per cent said both.

Among the PPP leaders, Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani saw a large increase in his popularity, with 64 per cent saying they liked him, up from 23 per cent in the last poll. Bilawal Bhutto Zardari also saw an increase in his popularity to 61 per cent, up from 55 per cent. Likewise, PPP co-chairman Asif Zardari also saw his popularity rise from 37 per cent to 45 per cent. And while Makhdoom Amin Fahim saw his popularity drop from a high of 67 per cent in the wake of Ms Bhutto’s assassination, he remained popular with a rating of 49 per cent. It is interesting to note that his rating is still higher than Mr Zardari’s.

Pakistanis consider February’s election to have been mostly fair; only 21 per cent said they felt that the elections had been rigged.

Re: 86 per cent think Pakistan headed in wrong direction

These 86% Pakistanies need to wake up and need a better leadership. Only taking part in these surveys wont serve the purpose.

83pc want Musharraf out, judges in: IRA survey

*Its clear what the people want, but sadly that damn Zardari with his NRO will continue to grin and make a couple of anti-musharraf statements in a week, and have his chapraasi turned polciya clown Rahman Malik continue the dilly-dallying!

Get rid of that dictator, and restore the judiciary, if you want to score points with the people!

P.S. Zardari’s popularity has gone up a little :hehe: Nawaz Sharif is now the most popular leader again because of his stance to restore the judiciary.*

Friday, July 18, 2008
ISLAMABAD: Eighty-three per cent of Pakistanis want President Pervez Musharraf to be removed and judges to be restored, according to a survey released by the US-based International Republican Institute on Thursday.

Coming three-and-a-half months after a coalition made up of anti-Musharraf parties formed a government, the IRI survey said Nawaz Sharif was now the most popular leader, because of the uncompromising position he has taken over the issues.

In contrast, the Pakistan People’s Party has been hurt by its ambivalence over the reinstatement of judges and how to tackle Musharraf.Yet 52 per cent of respondents said they were optimistic that things would get better in Pakistan under the new government.

The uncertainty in Pakistan is worrying Western powers and neighbours in the region, who fear a transition to civilian-led democracy could founder at a time when the threat of Islamist militancy is growing and the economy is floundering.

The country’s benchmark stock index has shed 35 per cent from a life high in April, depressed by investors’ worries about the political situation and its impact on the economy. The survey from the IRI, a US government-funded organisation chaired by US presidential contender John McCain, said Musharraf’s job approval ratings had dropped to 11 per cent. Only three per cent of people surveyed thought he was the best person to handle Pakistan’s problems.

Conducted between June 1-15, the IRI survey showed that of the 3,484 people, 82 per cent say that they like Sharif, up from 36 per cent in June 2006 when he trailed Musharraf and Bhutto.

**When asked who they would support in a future parliamentary election, PML-N was the choice of 36 per cent, up from the 29 per cent who said they voted for the party in February election. Sharif and Zardari disagree on the fate of senior judges Musharraf dismissed when he imposed emergency rule in November to stop the Supreme Court ruling on the legality of his re-election while army chief. Despite Zardari’s hesitancy confronting Musharraf, IRI’s poll found his popularity rating had gone up to 45 per cent from 37 per cent in the last poll released in February. **

83pc want Musharraf out, judges in: survey

Re: 83pc want Musharraf out, judges in: IRA survey

It’s always been clear that people do NOT want to see anymore of Musharraf in any of the Governmental affairs. The way PML(Q) was demolished is a clear indication of that. People chose the lesser evil and voted against PML(Q) just to spite Musharraf, even when they may not have agreed with PPP or PML(N). It’s like clear smoke, but vatican is still in denial.

PS: Spock for President, Sa1eem for secretary of (mis)information :rotfl:

J/K fellas…c’mon cheer up a little.

Re: 86 per cent think Pakistan headed in wrong direction

A revolution maybe overdue. When people are fed up to their noses with the wrong doings of their leaders, all they see is hopelessness and no one acts on their promises, people are bound to be up in arms. Every successful nation today, has had a revolution, whether it's quiet or one that requires much sacrifice but the result is a stronger nation.

Pakistan as a whole needs to wake up or else it might get swept away in the fast streams of current events.

:hehe:

I am not sure what you mean but Musharraf only continued slavery of US. The only incident of 'no US slavery' that comes to my mind is Pakistan tesing nuke in 1998, and that was probably because of huge pressure from public. Pakistan has remained a "slave" for very long time. To blame it on Mush will not be fair IMO.

How has Pakistan been a slave? What has Pakistan done that is not in Pakistan's best interests?

Re: 86 per cent think Pakistan headed in wrong direction

^ First example that comes to my mind is promoting jihad to cater to proxy war in Afghanistan, establishing training camps in Pakistan etc.

That was in Pakistan's interest. Having pro-India USSR, hungry for warm-water ports, along our western border was an intolerable situation.

Right and creation of Taliban was also right, killing them is also right :hehe:, abusing Islam was also right, indoctrinating people for your purpose is also right when those people have their own thought that is wrong… kill them.

Creating them was right at the time. Pakistan needed to end the infighting in Afghanistan and install a pliable government that would give us favourabe trade transit terms. Our previous effort at using an existing Afghan faction (that of Gulbuddin Hekmatyr) went disasterously wrong when he used the weapons we gave him to blast Kabul to pieces and yet failed to win the civil war, and earned us the hatred of the rest of the Afghan factions.

With the existing Afghan factions hating us for our Hekmatyr support, we couldn’t rely on them to be pliable and friendly. The only way we could further our interests in Afghanistan was with a new faction that was dependent on us… enter the Taliban.

That actually went pretty well for us until the Taliban decided that they no longer needed to take orders from us. There was a desperate effort to retain control of them which ultimately failed. At that point continuing to support the Taliban was no longer in our interests as they were not serving us anymore, and continuing support for them would harm Pakistan’s economy and people.

What they say "what goes around comes around"? You reap what you sow, we are reaping the rewards of creating warlords and abusing Islam. Taliban was not created in 90s, their root lies in the very 80s Afghan war. Now our own army/ISI is infested with their support. Admit it, it was mistake to indoctrinate people to support the cause.

Re: 86 per cent think Pakistan headed in wrong direction

how optimistic are the 12 percent that say pakistan is headed in the right direction?

Re: 86 per cent think Pakistan headed in wrong direction

only 86 plz its more like 100%

ASA, yeh to hamare ammaloo ki saza hai i heard one scholar say (close meaning) 51 % Muslims start praying 5 time salat, aaj Allah ki madad Muslims ke saath aa jai gi and InshAllah our problems will then start to go away, please pass this message along to any Muslims you know JazakAllah.

Why 51%? Does that mean that Allah mian also follows democratic rule of "majority"/"minority" or does 51% have some other significance?

Also, success is not in "5 times salat", Maulana Fazlur Rehman probably prays 5 times too, there are many smugglers I know pray 5 times... they goto haj every year but carry special powder. There is a lot more we have to do than 5 times salat for "success".

American institutes are not a reliable (or neutral) source in conducting these types of surveys. How can a country, that has so much (negative) involvement in Pakistan, be considered to be providing such authentic surveys without biases?

86% is an exaggerated figure, I think. The real figure may be around 60-70%.

ASA brother, 51% was to say because more then half of us are praying 5 time salat the InshAllah, Rabb's help with be us, but please tell me @ this time in the world what percentage of people we have that prays 5 time Salat with jamat very little may Allah SWAT give us taufeeq and hidayat, also Salat should keep from doing any bad deeds if you pray with dedication even Quran Majeed says that ( close meaning ) and common sense should prevail, a person who prays 5 time salat with jamat is becuase he is scared of Allah SWAT and when he is scared of Allah SWAT he would not do any wrong deeds I hope I have cleard some thoughts in this post, JazakAllah.

Re: 86 per cent think Pakistan headed in wrong direction

:hula: Martial Law Zindabad! Rest is bull**** :jhanda: