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Iran state TV poll reveals Iranians want nuclear programme stopped

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Iran state TV poll reveals Iranians want nuclear programme stopped

By Robert Tait
6:25PM BST 05 Jul 2012

Iran state TV poll reveals Iranians want nuclear programme stopped - Telegraph


The majority of Iranians want to suspend the country's nuclear programme in return for a lifting of western sanctions according to a state television poll which runs counter to claims of universal support by Iran's leaders (and its supporters on this website).


The survey, launched by the state broadcaster, IRIB, appeared designed to demonstrate a united front in the face of a new EU boycott of Iranian oil that came into effect last Sunday.


It asked viewers to express their preferred response online to the embargo, which Iran has greeted by staging a new series of war games and missile tests.


But the gambit turned into a spectacular own goal after two days of voting when IRIB's news channel screened results showing 63% of respondents in favour of suspending uranium enrichment in exchange for the gradual easing of sanctions.


TV bosses quickly stopped the poll and replaced it with one seeking viewers' opinions on an Iranian parliament proposal to close the Strait of Hormuz, a strategically vital waterway in the Persian Gulf that is the passageway for about one-fifth of the world's oil supplies.


But that too appeared to backfire when 89% of respondents opposed closing the strait. It was subsequently replaced by another survey about the popular Iranian football club, Persepolis.

It is not clear how many people participated and if all of them lived in Iran.

However, that the fiasco had touched a raw nerve become clear when IRIB claimed in a report that the results had been hacked by the BBC, an accusation the corporation denies.

The Iranian broadcaster insisted the true figure supporting uranium enrichment suspension was only 24% while the rest backed retaliatory measures. The original results showed only 20% supporting retaliation and 17% wanting a continuation of the current policy of "resistance" to sanctions.

"This survey shows that, while the Iranian people might want nuclear energy, they don't want it at the price the government is forcing them to pay through its negotiating strategy," said Meir Javedanfar, an Iranian-born commentator with the Middle East Economic and Political Analysis Company. "Their opinion is not factored into the government's negotiating strategy and this poll shows they are not happy with it."

The EU sanctions, coupled with a new US embargo punishing nations that continue to buy Iranian crude, threaten to drastically slash Tehran's oil revenues, on which Iran's economy depends. It is the latest in a series of punitive measures aimed at curbing a nuclear programme which the west suspect is a front for building an atom bomb. Iran says its goals are peaceful.
 
Iran state TV poll reveals Iranians want nuclear programme stopped

By Robert Tait
6:25PM BST 05 Jul 2012
.

If true then it is because of the fact that the US sanctions have hurt the ordinary hard working people of Iran and many living abroad, not the Iranian government.....unlike what you would like to believe.
 
This must be some propaganda poll, why else would state controlled media release the results of a poll that goes against them?

They must have some alternate motive for doing this.
 
yeah because IRIB website is not available in USA or The west, that poll is nothing, non Iranians can vote, heck it might have been hacked or spammed.

Iran state TV poll reveals Iranians want nuclear programme stopped

By Robert Tait
6:25PM BST 05 Jul 2012

Iran state TV poll reveals Iranians want nuclear programme stopped - Telegraph


The majority of Iranians want to suspend the country's nuclear programme in return for a lifting of western sanctions according to a state television poll which runs counter to claims of universal support by Iran's leaders (and its supporters on this website).


The survey, launched by the state broadcaster, IRIB, appeared designed to demonstrate a united front in the face of a new EU boycott of Iranian oil that came into effect last Sunday.


It asked viewers to express their preferred response online to the embargo, which Iran has greeted by staging a new series of war games and missile tests.


But the gambit turned into a spectacular own goal after two days of voting when IRIB's news channel screened results showing 63% of respondents in favour of suspending uranium enrichment in exchange for the gradual easing of sanctions.


TV bosses quickly stopped the poll and replaced it with one seeking viewers' opinions on an Iranian parliament proposal to close the Strait of Hormuz, a strategically vital waterway in the Persian Gulf that is the passageway for about one-fifth of the world's oil supplies.


But that too appeared to backfire when 89% of respondents opposed closing the strait. It was subsequently replaced by another survey about the popular Iranian football club, Persepolis.

It is not clear how many people participated and if all of them lived in Iran.

However, that the fiasco had touched a raw nerve become clear when IRIB claimed in a report that the results had been hacked by the BBC, an accusation the corporation denies.

The Iranian broadcaster insisted the true figure supporting uranium enrichment suspension was only 24% while the rest backed retaliatory measures. The original results showed only 20% supporting retaliation and 17% wanting a continuation of the current policy of "resistance" to sanctions.

"This survey shows that, while the Iranian people might want nuclear energy, they don't want it at the price the government is forcing them to pay through its negotiating strategy," said Meir Javedanfar, an Iranian-born commentator with the Middle East Economic and Political Analysis Company. "Their opinion is not factored into the government's negotiating strategy and this poll shows they are not happy with it."

The EU sanctions, coupled with a new US embargo punishing nations that continue to buy Iranian crude, threaten to drastically slash Tehran's oil revenues, on which Iran's economy depends. It is the latest in a series of punitive measures aimed at curbing a nuclear programme which the west suspect is a front for building an atom bomb. Iran says its goals are peaceful.

even the article admits it.
 
Anyone can quote anyone with no evidence at all!
It might have also been IRIB talking about some telegraph poll asking British and European citizens if they supported the sanctions against Iran and the results were the same as what is reported by the telegraph!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
It is all the old propaganda tricks for naive and western media gullible people.
 
Most Iranians indeed want the nuclear program to be stopped if that means that the sanctions will be lifted.
 
Is this corroborated by another poll? Or does the State media not take poll after this incident?
 
most iranian do whatever is necessary for their country and islam no matter whats the result
war with US
war with US and Arabs and israel
war with whole world
having nuclear program with more sanction
no nuclear program with or without sanction

i dont know why these idiots think that have right to even tell us what we think(but again they are idiot)
 
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