Suicide terrorism - part 2
We are against VIP ticket for suicide in prison and we are against terrorism suicide too!
https://t.me/EuthanasiaTelegram/430
Suicide bombing in the 1990s had at best mixed support from the Palestinian public, but, according to one expert, during the Second Intifada ‘‘Palestinian society as a whole cultivated the suicide ethos as a weapon of defiance.’’22 A poll conducted by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research in November 2002 found that 66 percent of those surveyed believed that violence helped Palestinians in ways that negotiations did not.
Support for suicide bombings fell to less than 30 percent for the first time during the Second Intifada.
Hamas steadily gained respect because its fighters waged what seemed to be an effective war against Israel, inflicting one body blow after another through suicide bombings. Polls taken in February 2000 showed Hamas enjoying 10 percent support and Fatah 36 percent; in September 2005, immediately after the Gaza pullout, Hamas’s support was up to 30 percent.
One of the worst attacks occurred on June 1, 2001, when a Palestinian suicide bomber stepped into a line of people waiting to enter the Tel Aviv Dolphinarium Disco, wounding 120 and killing 21, mostly teenage immigrants from the former Soviet Union.
We are against VIP ticket for suicide in prison and we are against terrorism suicide too!
https://t.me/EuthanasiaTelegram/430
Suicide bombing in the 1990s had at best mixed support from the Palestinian public, but, according to one expert, during the Second Intifada ‘‘Palestinian society as a whole cultivated the suicide ethos as a weapon of defiance.’’22 A poll conducted by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research in November 2002 found that 66 percent of those surveyed believed that violence helped Palestinians in ways that negotiations did not.
Support for suicide bombings fell to less than 30 percent for the first time during the Second Intifada.
Hamas steadily gained respect because its fighters waged what seemed to be an effective war against Israel, inflicting one body blow after another through suicide bombings. Polls taken in February 2000 showed Hamas enjoying 10 percent support and Fatah 36 percent; in September 2005, immediately after the Gaza pullout, Hamas’s support was up to 30 percent.
One of the worst attacks occurred on June 1, 2001, when a Palestinian suicide bomber stepped into a line of people waiting to enter the Tel Aviv Dolphinarium Disco, wounding 120 and killing 21, mostly teenage immigrants from the former Soviet Union.