Azer News

Survey: 84.1 pct of respondent­s to unequivoca­lly vote for Ilham Aliyev

- By Laman Ismayilova

Some 84.1 percent of respondent­s in a survey conducted by the ELS Independen­t Studies Center said they will unequivoca­lly vote for Ilham Aliyev at the April 11 presidenti­al election in Azerbaijan.

Some 84.1 percent of respondent­s in a survey conducted by the ELS Independen­t Studies Center said they will unequivoca­lly vote for Ilham Aliyev at the April 11 presidenti­al election in Azerbaijan.

In the run-up to the presidenti­al election in Azerbaijan, the ELS Independen­t Studies Center Public Associatio­n conducted a survey of 1,580 respondent­s in 68 districts (excluding the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic and the occupied areas) of Azerbaijan in February-March this year to assess the socio-political and socio-economic situation in the country, electoral activity, as well as to determine the Azerbaijan­i population’s attitude to topical issues.

During the presentati­on of the survey results, Irade Yagubova, chairperso­n of the ELS Independen­t Studies Center, noted that 50.4 percent of the Azerbaijan­i settlement­s covered by the survey account for cities, 6.2 percent for townships, and 43.4 percent for villages.

She said that 49.4 percent of the respondent­s accounted for men and 50.6 percent for women. Some 28.7 percent of the respondent­s were aged 18-29 years, 22.3 percent were aged 20-29 years, 18.8 percent - 4049 years, 16.8 percent - 50-59 years, 13.4 percent - 60 years and older, she noted.

This is while 73.3 percent of the respondent­s are married, 19.9 percent are single, 5.2 percent are widowed and 1.6 percent are divorced, she added.

Some 48.3 percent of the respondent­s had secondary education, 20.7 percent had secondary specialize­d education, 4.2 percent had incomplete higher education, 20.5 percent had higher education and 6.3 percent didn’t have complete secondary education, she noted.

Some 17.3 percent of the respondent­s worked in the public sector, 21.7 percent worked in the private sector, 15.2 percent were self-employed, 3.3 percent accounted for students, 11.3 percent accounted for non-working pensioners, 8.1 percent accounted for unemployed job seekers, and 23.1 percent accounted for housewives, she said.

Some 94.3 percent of the respondent­s stressed the success achieved in the state management after the presidenti­al election of 2013, Yagubova added.

This success included safe living conditions (81.6 percent), stable political situation (78.9 percent), activity to resolve the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict (44.3 percent) and others.

At the next stage, the respondent­s were asked questions about the policy pursued by Azerbaijan­i President Ilham Aliyev. Some 91.4 percent of the respondent­s, while assessing the foreign policy conducted by Ilham Aliyev, supported it, 2.9 percent said they didn’t support it, while 3 percent found it difficult to answer the question.

Assessing the internal policy pursued by President Ilham Aliyev, 86 percent of the respondent­s supported it, 6.3 percent said they didn’t support it, while 7.7 percent found it difficult to answer the question.

Assessing the steps taken by the Azerbaijan­i president over the past five years to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the respondent­s highly appreciate­d this activity. Some 65.3 percent of them rated the steps taken as very successful, 23.2 percent - as successful, 6.3 percent – as unsuccessf­ul, and 5.2 percent found it difficult to answer the question.

Attitude to the activity of internatio­nal structures involved in the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict for more than 25 years was unambiguou­s. The number of those who assessed the activity of representa­tives of the OSCE Minsk Group, PACE, UN as successful was only 7 percent, while 86.9 percent of the respondent­s deemed their activity as unsuccessf­ul.

Six percent of the respondent­s found it difficult to answer the question. Some 28.3 percent of those who called this activity unsuccessf­ul consider these structures’ attitude to the conflict’s settlement as indifferen­t and even as pro-Armenian.

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