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Bahrain's FM to meet with Palestinian president in Ramallah on Wednesday

Glick: Foreign Minister Livni was better with frizzy hair and no power

Jordan's PM says return to Mideast peacemaking is paramount

Palestinian poll shows Fatah-Hamas neck-and-neck should a new election be called

Christian conservatives to fight restrictions on military chaplains


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10.3.06
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Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of the Islamic group Hamas, heads a cabinet meeting at his office in Gaza City, Monday. (AP)

Poll: Most Palestinians favor following Hezbollah tactics against Israel
Hamas-led government says some public salaries to be paid, first since March
 
Palestinian poll shows Fatah-Hamas neck-and-neck should a new election be called
By: Associated Press   
Published: October 3, 2006   
 
The Fatah movement of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is tied with the Islamic militant Hamas in voter support, according to a poll published Tuesday, undercutting hopes by Palestinian moderates that Fatah could oust Hamas if new elections were held.

As one of several options, Abbas is considering calling early elections, both for president and parliament, but Tuesday's poll and other recent surveys indicate there is no guarantee voters would return Fatah to power.

Abbas' party controlled Palestinian politics for four decades and was forced out in January amid growing anger over official corruption and mismanagement. Support for Hamas remains steady, even though many Palestinians have been plunged deeper into poverty because of an international aid boycott of the Hamas government.

The poll among 1,200 Palestinians also indicated that Palestinians consider Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas more trustworthy than Abbas, by 19 percent to 14.5 percent.

The survey was conducted by the Jerusalem Media and Communications Center between Sept. 19 and 22, before a new round of deadly internal violence erupted this weekend. At the time of the survey, Hamas and Fatah were negotiating the formation of a national unity government, but the talks have since broken down.

In the survey, 56 percent said a national unity government was the best way out of the current crisis. If an election were held today, Fatah would get 32 percent of the vote, compared to 30.5 percent for Hamas.

The poll has an error margin of 3 percentage points.

More than half said they oppose attacks on Israel and 46.6 percent said they support a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
 
 
 

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