54% of Israelis support continuation of humanitarian pause, hostage swap deal
A poll showed that 54% of Israeli respondents support continuing the humanitarian pause and postponing the process of overthrowing Hamas, while only 25% oppose it.
- Middle East
- Anadolu Agency
- Published Date: 04:10 | 01 December 2023
- Modified Date: 04:15 | 01 December 2023
A latest public opinion poll showed that 54% of Israelis support the continuation of the humanitarian pause in the Gaza Strip and the hostages swap deal between Israel and Hamas.
The poll was conducted before the end of the humanitarian pause on Friday morning and the resumption of Israel's war on Gaza.
The poll was conducted by Israel's academic Lazar Institute and included a random sample of 603 Israelis. The maximum margin of error was 3.7%.
The Hebrew newspaper Maariv published the results later on Friday.
"Most Israeli citizens support the continuation of the pause in the Gaza Strip in exchange for the daily release of 'kidnapped' Hamas captives," the newspaper said.
The poll showed that 54% of respondents support continuing the pause and postponing the process of overthrowing Hamas, while only 25% oppose it.
Twenty-one percent of participants said they did not have a specific answer.
Israel early Friday resumed its military operations against the Gaza Strip after the end of the humanitarian pause, targeting various areas in the north, center, and south of the strip, resulting in dozens of deaths and injuries, according to the ministry in Gaza.
At least 32 Palestinians were killed and many others injured as Israel resumed striking areas in the Gaza Strip within hours of the end of the pause, the ministry said.
The pause between Israel and Hamas, which went into effect on Nov. 24, ended on Friday morning.
- Netanyahu tells Blinken Israeli plan to create buffer zone inside Gaza
- Aid trucks stop entering Gaza as humanitarian pause ends
- Freed Palestinian activist says her last arrest by Israel was 'the harshest'
- Israeli defense minister flies over Gaza to witness army's attacks, calling them 'impressive'
- Israel not to renew top aid official's visa, says UN