OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, July 5 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Almost half
of the Palestinians oppose Egypt's offer to send security experts to
the Gaza Strip after a potential Israeli withdrawal and evacuation of
Jewish settlements, fearing it would only serve Israeli interests,
showed a poll released Sunday, July 4.
It
also found surging popularity for resistance groups struggling to
liberate the entire occupied Palestinian territories, Reuters news
agency reported.
Conducted
by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research (PSR), the
survey showed that 46 percent of the respondents opposed the Egyptian
role and 51 percent favored.
However,
over 80 percent in the poll backed Cairo's demand for merging
Palestinian security organs under an empowered Interior Minister.
Gaza
Ghetto
The
Palestinians are deeply concerned that the Egyptian presence will only
serve the interests of the Israelis and leave them isolated.
"We
see considerable Palestinian concern that what Israel is proposing
would leave them in a suffocating Gaza ghetto while it consolidates
its main settlement enterprise in the West Bank," PSR director
Khalil Shikaki told Reuters.
"This
relative lack of support can be explained by a fear that one
occupation would end only for another to begin."
Shikaki
further said that the Palestinian groups will also come under great
pressure to give up resistance against the Israeli occupation.
Fifty-nine
percent in the poll worried about armed chaos after a pullout.
Egypt,
one of only two Arab states to have peace treaties with Israel, has
offered to send up to 200 security experts to Gaza to train
Palestinian police in controlling the strip.
Palestinian
President Yasser Arafat has publicly endorsed Egypt's offer but
resisted previous calls for security reforms.
Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who has scheduled the Gaza evacuation for
2005 according to his controversial
to avoid getting mired in the conflict.
Egypt
ruled Gaza from 1948 to 1967, when Israel occupied it in the 1967 war.
Surging
Popularity
The
poll, which questioned 1,320 people from June 24 to 27, also
demonstrated a surging popularity for Palestinian resistance groups
and growing support for anti-Israeli occupation.
Fifty-five
percent backed attacks on Israelis from Gaza if Israel did not
withdraw completely, it showed.
The
poll found 35 percent loyal to Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Gaza
compared with 27 percent for Arafat's mainstream Fatah movement,
weakened by corruption and internal feuding.
It
was Fatah's poorest poll since the still ongoing Palestinian Intifada
against Israeli occupation erupted in 2000.
Palestinian
resistance factions have already