Taliban Increasingly Unpopular in Pakistan

I want to know what the 4% of people who still support taliban see good in these barbarians? BTW, biggest drop of support for Taliban is NWFP.

Taliban Increasingly Unpopular in PakistanMarch 12, 2010

               **Taliban Increasingly Unpopular in Pakistan**

               **Four percent say Taliban's presence is positive influence**

               by Julie Ray and Rajesh Srinivasan
             
             *This article is the first of a two-part series that looks at Pakistanis' and Afghans' views of the Taliban's influence and their respective countries' efforts to combat terrorism.*

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Taliban’s presence on either side of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border is largely unwelcome, but increasingly so in Pakistan, where Gallup surveys show they have lost much of the little appeal they had. Four percent of Pakistanis in a November-December 2009 poll, conducted prior to Pakistan’s current push to rout the Taliban within its borders, said the Taliban’s presence in some areas of the country has a positive influence, down from 15% in June.

http://sas-origin.onstreammedia.com/origin/gallupinc/GallupSpaces/Production/Cms/POLL/bx3wjsf-zu-chggokhgltg.gif

Gallup most recently polled Pakistanis in the particularly deadly period after the army’s anti-Taliban operations in the South Waziristan tribal area started in October. Retributive militant attacks across Pakistan reportedly have claimed more than 600 Pakistanis’ lives since then, which the public’s increasingly negative view of the Taliban may reflect.
The Taliban lost support in every region of Pakistan. But nowhere are they more unpopular than in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), ground zero for a full-scale military offensive against the Taliban last May. In November-December 2009, 1% of NWFP residents said the Taliban have a positive influence, down from 11% in June. The percentage saying the Taliban’s influence is positive in Baluchistan, which abuts South Waziristan, dropped from 26% to 5%.

http://sas-origin.onstreammedia.com/origin/gallupinc/GallupSpaces/Production/Cms/POLL/6regvbgvj0sptlkcvgo8aq.gif

On the other side of the border, Afghans agree with Pakistanis that the Taliban have a negative influence. However, Afghans’ views have remained relatively unchanged despite the Taliban’s threats and violence before the presidential election in August. In both surveys in 2009, roughly 8 in 10 Afghans said the Taliban has a negative influence.

http://sas-origin.onstreammedia.com/origin/gallupinc/GallupSpaces/Production/Cms/POLL/gy-6alv-nkuyivuhu0vfsq.gif

Majorities of Afghans in every region of the country see the Taliban as a negative influence, with their opinions changing little throughout 2009. Residents in the South, which included people in Kandahar, where U.S. and coalition forces are expected to challenge the Taliban this summer, continued to be more likely than others to say the Taliban have a positive influence. But even so, the majority said the Taliban have a negative influence.

http://sas-origin.onstreammedia.com/origin/gallupinc/GallupSpaces/Production/Cms/POLL/jdprdeojd0eea0wfre0rcw.gif

Bottom Line
Gallup’s surveys show few Afghans and even fewer Pakistanis view the Taliban’s presence as a positive influence, which suggests there may be popular support for government efforts to dislodge the Taliban. Public support will be an important factor in the coming months if Pakistan continues its anti-Taliban operations and as the U.S. and coalition forces begin their offensive in Kandahar.
For complete data sets or custom research from the more than 150 countries Gallup continually surveys, please contact [EMAIL=“[email protected]”][email protected] or call 202.715.3030 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202.715.3030 end_of_the_skype_highlighting.
Survey Methods
Results are based on face-to-face interviews in Pakistan with 1,147 adults, aged 15 and older, conducted in Nov. 14 to Dec. 7, 2009, and 1,133 adults, conducted May 1 to June 30, 2009. For results based on the total sample of national adults, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error is ±3.7 percentage points.
FATA/FANA were excluded. The excluded area represents less than 5% of the population. Please note improved sample coverage and change in data collection agency beginning June 2009 measurement. The survey included Azad Jammu and Kashmir, but sample sizes were too small to report results. Maximum margin of error by region in both survey waves ranged from ±6 percentage points in Punjab to ±11 percentage points in Baluchistan.
Results are based on face-to-face interviews with 1,000 adults, aged 15 and older, conducted Sept. 20 to Oct. 12, 2009, and 1,000 adults in June 4-16, 2009, in Afghanistan. For results based on the total sample of national adults, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error is ±4 percentage points. Seventeen provinces were randomly chosen from 34 provinces and the sample was adjusted to reflect the population in terms of age, gender, and ethnicity, and rural and urban population. Sample sizes and margins of error for each region were the same in both survey administrations.
North Afghanistan: Results based on interviews with 290 adults from the provinces of Balkh, Kunduz, Sar E Pol, Takhar, Badakhstan, and Samangan. The maximum margin of sampling error is ±7 percentage points.
Central Afghanistan: Results based on interviews with 250 adults from the provinces of Bamiyan, Kabul, Parwan. The maximum margin of sampling error is ±8 percentage points.
South Afghanistan: Results based on interviews with 230 adults from the provinces of Ghazni, Kandahar, Zabul, and Paktika. The maximum margin of sampling error is ±8 percentage points.
West Afghanistan: Results based on interviews with 130 adults from the provinces of Badghis and Herat. The maximum margin of sampling error is ±11 percentage points.
East Afghanistan: Results based on interviews with 100 adults from the provinces of Nurestan and Nangarhar. The maximum margin of sampling error is ±13 percentage points.
The margin of error reflects the influence of data weighting. In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.

Re: Taliban Increasingly Unpopular in Pakistan

That's great news. Thanks for sharing.

unfortunately our Jihadis who are settled in US/UK still support these warlords aka Talibotics.

But in the end, these Jihadis will change their ways or be put in concentration camps in UK/US.

Such will be end of Jihadis all over the world.

We can't wait for that moment when this disease will be gone or wiped out.

And NONE Pakistani residing in Pakistan is supporting these Talibotics? :rotfl:

The survey shows that a small number of Jihadis do exist in Pak. Nothing to laugh about it.

I was laughing at your taking a pot-shot at Talibotics-supporters living in 'west' only and no mentioning of those living in Pakistan or elsewhere.

Re: Taliban Increasingly Unpopular in Pakistan

yeah if we extrapolate that 4% to entire population then the local supporters far outnumber the fringe nutjobs overseas. lets not grind personal axes here :)

4% of 180M is not a 'small' number, small percentage of total yes, small number...no. its around what 7M or so
total pakistani population in USA is 600K, including ppl boirn here, if we dont count them then its quarter million or so, and total population of Pakistanis in UK is at most what 2M?

if every person of Pakistani origin in UK and US was an extremist(which is not even close to the case), then they still would not be half of the extremist supporters in Pakistan.

Math is good n stuff..

Boo Yah

well he/she does have a point. if someone sitting in Pakistan supports Taliban, then he might himself become a victim of the barbarians he supports. and even then, most of those lost souls (except for JI followers) who might have sympathized with the barbarians once upon a time have been forced to reevaluate their views for self-serving reasons if nothing else.

but it ridiculous for someone to sit in UK/US/Canada and enjoy the benefits of secular democracy, freedom of religion, freedom of speech to openly support or secretly defend the Taliban like you see here and on other forums. can't get any more ironic than that - living in countries that are for the most part extremely tolerant and yet support so-called Muslims who cannot even tolerate fellow Muslims.

I remember the thread when FairyTale was talking about the town where kids were blown up playing volleyball in the evening. she said she was from that small town and how she was devastated, etc. but as soon as someone said something against the Taliban, she jumped into overdrive defending the Taliban and pinned it all on Jews and Hindus. and this was after some TV anchors went to the town and spoke to the people of the town who mentioned that many small time criminals and thugs had joined up with the Taliban and that they had unleashed this barbarity on the people of the town. I mean for God's sake, how thick can we be? how much more proof do we need? when will we open our eyes?

these Taliban are not some warriors descended from heaven. most of them are illiterate. that Muslim Khan jackass of Swat was a laborer in the middle east. and these people made him into some sort of a great general a la Tariq bin Ziyad or whatever.

so, I agree with burqaposhx, it is ridiculous for those sitting in the west and enjoying the benefits of democracy to support/defend the Taliban or wish for martial law/army dictatorship (another fashionable demand from expats).

I haven't come across any one who has moved to US/UK from Pakistan because of lack of religious/speech freedom. Probably Ahmadis are the only ones who might have moved to UK/Europe for freedom but other than them most (if not all) have moved for higher education and economic benefits just like people goto mid-eastern countries though they are despised for same (religious/freedom issues).

People abroad are representative of Pakistan living in Pakistan, you will find them of all opinions. You will even find supporters of thugs from PPP, PML, MQM similarly you will find supporters of JI etc so why cry about that?

Re: Taliban Increasingly Unpopular in Pakistan

the question on the above questionaire is abit off the mark, of course the taliban is not everyones choice of ideal government. im not saying they make a bad government, they live in a riba less society and even the european priests have praised them for their dedication to religion. indeed being a muslim, its good to see someone using the religion as their constituition, laws and everything else. however, we all know not everyone will welcome their presence especially when they have helicopter gunships coming right after them. so the above question is a bit off, it only deals with one particular situation

the real poll question to ask pakistanis is if they believe the 911 official version. that question will answer whether the war on the talibs is justified or not!

obviously give or take the 60% of pakistanis who do not realise that if 911 was fabricated then it makes the war on the talibs immoral beyond words

911 was fabricated by who?

Re: Taliban Increasingly Unpopular in Pakistan

comment is yours, but please spare us from any self serving analysis

that was not my argument at all. I was not suggesting that Pakistanis (except for perhaps religious minorities as you noted) move abroad for freedom, etc. but clearly once they are there, they also benefit from freedom of speech, freedom of religion, democracy, etc in the west.

so, it is retarded of them to say things like oh Pakistan needs a benevolent dictatorship. Pakistanis are unfit for democracy, etc. ALL politicians are corrupt. and other rubbish statements defending the Taliban.

I am not arguing about numbers. but it has been my experience on other forums, etc, that most of the JI-types who support Taliban, worship at the altar of Zaid Hamid, Shahid Masood, etc are on student visas in the UK, US, etc. like I said, benefiting from democracy, western education and still wishing for these bearded cavemen to take over Pakistan. the avg guy in Lahore (unless he is a jamaatia) cannot afford to support Taliban now, imo, for self-survival if nothing else.

Re: Taliban Increasingly Unpopular in Pakistan

and yet these barbarians were able to carry out the recent lahore bombings? tell me how is it even possible without the support of traitors? what a shame!

What self serving analysis? I provided no analysis. You said 911 was fabricated & most of us are curious to know how you came to that conclusion.