What's new

Poll about how many Bangladeshi's have favorable views of India and consider India greatest threat

As a Bangladeshi do you have favorable view of India and consider India as the greatest threat?


  • Total voters
    74
  • Poll closed .

kalu_miah

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jan 4, 2009
Messages
6,475
Reaction score
17
Country
Bangladesh
Location
United States
THIS POLL IS FOR BANGLADESHI'S ONLY. IF YOU ARE NOT A BANGLADESHI, DO NOT VOTE. YOU WILL BE MAKING A FOOL OUT OF YOURSELF. CLICK ON THE NUMBER OF VOTES, IT DISPLAYS WHICH USER VOTED. ITS AN OPEN POLL.

How Asians view each other
How Asians View Each Other | Pew Research Center's Global Attitudes Project

In the Pew report in above thread, it says 70% Bangladeshi's have favorable views of India.

In response, I made the following post in that thread:
How Asians view each other
Methods in Detail | Pew Research Center's Global Attitudes Project
"Country:Bangladesh
Sample design:Multi-stage cluster sample stratified by administrative division and urbanity
Mode:Face-to-face adults 18 plus
Languages:Bengali
Fieldwork dates:April 14 – May 11, 2014
Sample size:1,000
Margin of error:+/-3.8 percentage points
Representative:Adult population"

It is opinion of 1000 people out of 160 million. The Pew subcontractor in Bangladesh most likely is pro-India Awami League supporter or were forced by Awami League to show 70% favorable image of India. Or it could be that they chose many 1000 Awami League supporters as sample. 70% people having favorable view of India is simply not believable.

Just to show a bit of credibility they are showing that India is considered as number one threat for Bangladesh, but only 27% think that, question is what other country this other 73% think of as a threat?

This shows how stupid and poorly these kind of reports are done with shoddy standards employing biased people, which can easily be tainted and rendered worthless.

How about we take a poll in PDF to see how many Bangladeshi's have favorable views of India?

This report also says only 27% of Bangladeshi's consider India as the greatest threat. Lets also take a poll on this subject, see how true this percentage is.

I will keep the poll the open for all to see, so we can weed out any non-Bangladeshi vote.
 
Last edited:
. .
Bangladeshis who are no longer bangladeshi should take participate in this poll because they are now american/british/or citizen of any other country and know nothing about ground realities bangladesh.

I find it very entertaining how the resident Jamatis on pdf think they are Arab, Turks and Persian by race and Bengali is a Hindu identity. Have you seen those discussion where even real Turks failed to convince them that Bangladeshis don't have Turkish ancestry. :omghaha::omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:
 
.
I find it very entertaining how the resident Jamatis on pdf think they are Arab, Turks and Persian by race and Bengali is a Hindu identity. Have you seen those discussion where even real Turks failed to convince them that Bangladeshis don't have Turkish ancestry. :omghaha::omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:

Yup. a Professional bangladeshi claim that they are so handsome because of turkish ancestry.
 
.
This is an old article, but it shows the ground reality in Bangladesh from a PRO INDIAN journalist. Every Indian should read this.

What does ‘anti-Indian’ mean?

What does ‘anti-Indian’ mean?

Bangladesh is still buzzing about Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's remarks at a Q&A session with Indian editors last week. After praising Bangladesh and expressing satisfaction with the bilateral relationship, he issued the caveat: "But we must reckon that 25% of the population of Bangladesh swear by the Jamiat-ul-Islami [sic] and they are very anti-Indian and they are in the clutches, many times, of the ISI. So a political landscape in Bangladesh can change at any time."

The statement was regrettable because it indicated that Indian intelligence remains woefully misinformed about the political reality in Bangladesh. By no means does anywhere close to 25% of the population support the Jamaat. In reality, they command less than 5% of the popular vote and saw their representation in Parliament sink to one seat in the last election. With much of the party's senior leadership in jail and facing charges for war crimes, the Jamaat's popularity has in fact never been at such a low ebb.

But let us call a spade a spade. If Manmohan Singh erred in his reckoning of Jamaat supporters within the country and in his conflation of anti-Indianism with the Jamaat, he may have been closer to the mark with his suggestions about the depths of anti-Indian sentiment in Bangladesh.

It all depends on how one defines being anti-Indian. If anti-Indianism is to encompass rejection of Bollywood, Indian television, and IPL cricket, then we can safely say that this should not be a concern.

However, if he is referring to Bangladeshi resentment against what is perceived to be India's looking down on Bangladesh and its supercilious and condescending attitude, then the sentiment is well-nigh universal inside the country.

If he is referring to unhappiness over border killings (though somewhat abated of late) and a sense of grievance over trade, water-sharing, and other touchstone issues where the Bangladeshi public feels that it is being bullied and strong-armed by India, the number is in fact far higher than 25% of the population.

My editor has on more than one occasion chided me for what he sees as my chippy attitude to India. These kinds of assessments are always a bit subjective, and he may have a point. But what is instructive is that in Bangladesh I am considered one of the more pro-Indian commentators. It's not a compliment, either. The thought that I harbour some kind of anti-Indian animosity would be greeted with hilarity in Dhaka, which goes to show just where popular opinion stands, and suggests the gulf in perception between our two countries.

Manmohan Singh has been criticised for his comments by voices including ex-high commissioner to Dhaka Veena Sikri and columnist Kuldip Nayar, whom Bangladeshis have always considered friendly. But while attempts to portray Bangladesh in a more accurate and attractive light are always appreciated, there is some truth to Manmohan Singh's apprehension of anti-Indianism in Bangladesh. In fact, it was not long ago that Kuldip Nayar memorably wrote about Bangladesh that "the anti-Indian sentiment is so strong, you can taste it." Nothing has changed except the government.

Perhaps the most interesting and useful commentary on the matter came from Mihir Sharma in the Indian Express. Sharma wrote in concrete terms of how Bangladeshis feel let down following the ground-breaking 2010 summit between the two Prime Ministers: "Since [then] an enormous amount of nothing has been achieved ... the Bangladeshi side created the foundations for further cooperation, making what was already agreed upon happen. And, each time, the Indian side failed to reciprocate, or did so with sloth and delay."

It is important to get beyond the simplistic rhetoric of Bangladesh being anti-Indian offered by one side or Bangladesh being pro-Indian offered by the other. The truth is more complex and nuanced, and it is important to correctly gauge the public sentiment so that those of us who wish for a better bilateral relationship understand what we are up against and what must be done to move in that direction.

This is why the Indian foreign minister's current visit and Manmohan Singh's September one, and the agreements that are being signed, are so crucial. The health of the bilateral relationship depends entirely on the efforts made on both sides of the border. Manmohan Singh is right to caution about anti-Indian sentiment. But such sentiment is not cast in stone, and he has it within his power to transform the popular perception of India within Bangladesh. But to do that, first he must transform his own perception of Bangladesh.
 
. . .
Maan na maan my thera mehemaan
Irritant jamathis at it again
 
.
wow 66% people say "I have favorable view of India and I do not consider India as the greatest threat for Bangladesh"
 
. .
Poll says Bangladeshi view, yet 3 indians
and 1 Pakistani
  • LoveIcon
cast vote in favor of india. We can discount those votes as null and void. other 2 votes are non Bangladeshi as well one from Jordanian and another new recruit who has no other post exists in the forum.

So far 100% of Bangladeshis cast vote for
I do not have favorable view of India and I consider India as the greatest threat for Bangladesh.
 
Last edited:
. .
all i can do i laugh at your sample size and sample population lol
Not a very good researcher you will turn out to be my friends
 
.
THIS POLL IS FOR BANGLADESHI'S ONLY. IF YOU ARE NOT A BANGLADESHI, DO NOT VOTE. YOU WILL BE MAKING A FOOL OUT OF YOURSELF. CLICK ON THE NUMBER OF VOTES, IT DISPLAYS WHICH USER VOTED. ITS AN OPEN POLL.

I cannot depend upon Bangladeshi intellect to vote in a poll on such delicate issues, hence..................!! :drag:
 
Last edited:
.
I cannot depend on Bangladeshi intellect to vote in a poll on such delicate issues, hence..................!! :drag:

We are sorry for your pea size brain, sorry pappu it is out of your league.
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom