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This is from a dawn report, which is taken from a survey done by a US research groups.
The report can be found HERE
Eighty-nine per cent Pakistanis surveyed by a leading US research group say they think of themselves first as Pakistanis, rather than as members of their ethnic groups.
The global attitudes survey by the Pew Research Centre, Washington, also shows that eighty-six per cent Pakistanis believe the military is having a good influence on the country.
As many as seventy per cent Pakistanis have unfavourable views of the Taliban and sixty-one per cent reject Al Qaeda openly. Between thirty-twenty per cent say they do not know the two groups well enough to express an opinion.
President Asif Ali Zardari’s ratings have plummeted: Last year, sixty-four per cent people surveyed by Pew had a favourable opinion of him; now just thirty-two per cent hold this view.
While views about national conditions are overwhelmingly negative, most Pakistanis are upbeat about their personal lives — seventy-four per cent say they are very or somewhat satisfied with their overall lives, and most are satisfied with their family lives and incomes.
The nation-state is of great significance to Pakistanis, and despite important ethnic and regional differences, national identity is strong throughout the country. Overall, eighty-nine per cent say they think of themselves first as Pakistani, rather than as a member of the ethnic group they come from.
Just thirty-six per cent say the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence is having a good impact, although many respondents (forty-one per cent) do not offer an opinion.
more Pakistanis judge India as a very serious threat to the nation (sixty-nine per cent) than regard the Taliban (fifty-seven per cent) or Al Qaeda (forty-one per cent) as very serious threats. Most Pakistanis see the US as on the wrong side of this issue: by a margin of fifty-four per cent to 4 per cent the US is seen as favouring India over Pakistan.
Pakistanis express overwhelmingly positive opinions about another Asian giant — eighty-four per cent have a favourable view of China and eighty per cent consider China a partner to their country.
yaaran naal baharan
The report can be found HERE
Eighty-nine per cent Pakistanis surveyed by a leading US research group say they think of themselves first as Pakistanis, rather than as members of their ethnic groups.
The global attitudes survey by the Pew Research Centre, Washington, also shows that eighty-six per cent Pakistanis believe the military is having a good influence on the country.
As many as seventy per cent Pakistanis have unfavourable views of the Taliban and sixty-one per cent reject Al Qaeda openly. Between thirty-twenty per cent say they do not know the two groups well enough to express an opinion.
President Asif Ali Zardari’s ratings have plummeted: Last year, sixty-four per cent people surveyed by Pew had a favourable opinion of him; now just thirty-two per cent hold this view.
While views about national conditions are overwhelmingly negative, most Pakistanis are upbeat about their personal lives — seventy-four per cent say they are very or somewhat satisfied with their overall lives, and most are satisfied with their family lives and incomes.
The nation-state is of great significance to Pakistanis, and despite important ethnic and regional differences, national identity is strong throughout the country. Overall, eighty-nine per cent say they think of themselves first as Pakistani, rather than as a member of the ethnic group they come from.
Just thirty-six per cent say the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence is having a good impact, although many respondents (forty-one per cent) do not offer an opinion.
more Pakistanis judge India as a very serious threat to the nation (sixty-nine per cent) than regard the Taliban (fifty-seven per cent) or Al Qaeda (forty-one per cent) as very serious threats. Most Pakistanis see the US as on the wrong side of this issue: by a margin of fifty-four per cent to 4 per cent the US is seen as favouring India over Pakistan.
Pakistanis express overwhelmingly positive opinions about another Asian giant — eighty-four per cent have a favourable view of China and eighty per cent consider China a partner to their country.
yaaran naal baharan