POLL SAYS KAZAKHS DON'T EXPECT REPEAT OF UKRAINE EVENTS
Published:
22 December 2004 y., Wednesday
A poll conducted on 5-13 December among 2,480 respondents in 17 major Kazakh cities by the National Association of Sociologists and Political Scientists found that a slim majority support President Nursultan Nazarbaev and few expect a repeat of the events in Ukraine when Kazakhstan holds a presidential election in 2006, Interfax-Kazakhstan reported on 20 December.
When asked who they would vote for if a presidential election was held today, 50.6 percent of respondents named President Nazarbaev. Asked whether a "Ukrainian situation" is possible in Kazakhstan, only 16.4 percent replied "I think so," with 43.3 percent saying "I don't think so," and 40.1 percent finding the question difficult to answer. U.S. Ambassador to Kazakhstan John Ordway seemed to agree, telling a news conference on 20 December that a "Ukraine scenario" in Kazakhstan is "a rather far-fetched comparison."
Šaltinis:
Interfax-Kazakhstan, RFE
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
At 11 years old, Michelito Lagrave is a veteran bullfighter, with more than a 160 kills to his name.
more »
20-year-old beauty queen Mariana Bridi da Costa by Saturday was dead.
more »
The 12-year-old is living rough in a UN school with his parents and nine siblings.
more »
The provincial elections will be the first to be organized by Iraq and held under Iraqi laws since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.
more »
The three-day tattoo show - the first of its kind in Asia- is expected to draw about 5,000 people, as its showcases tattooists from about 25 countries around the world.
more »
The West Eastern Divan Orchestra is made up of 90 members from the Middle East.
more »
Joe the Plumber became a household name during the 2008 presidential campaign when Wurzelbacher questioned then-candidate Democrat Barack Obama about his tax policy.
more »
China's coldest city of Harbin played host to twenty-two couples getting married in sub-zero temperatures.
more »
Now in a global economic crisis, developers in Argentina are still promoting multi-million dollar, multi-polo-field properties as the cost-conscious alternative to traditional hot spots like Palm Beach.
more »
The ban on women entering the Iraqi Shi'ite shrine district of Khadimiya for the annual Ashura ritual is unprecedented.
more »