[🇮🇱] Israel is world’s most disliked country

[🇮🇱] Israel is world’s most disliked country
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G  Israeli Defense

Saif

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Israel becomes world’s most disliked country: survey
New Age Desk 15 May, 2026, 00:49

Israel is now perceived more negatively than any other country in the world, followed by North Korea, Afghanistan and Iran, according to new global polling published by Nira Data as part of its 2026 democracy and country perception research, reports Middle East Monitor.Health & Wellness

The five most positively perceived countries were Switzerland, Canada, Japan, Sweden and Italy.

The findings place Israel at the bottom of the Global Country Perceptions 2026 ranking, a survey of 46,667 respondents assessing how 129 countries and three international organisations are viewed around the world.

The ranking was published alongside Nira Data’s 2026 Democracy Perception Index, which surveyed 94,146 respondents across 98 countries on how citizens experience democracy in their own countries.

The result marks another sign of Israel’s deepening international isolation amid its genocide in Gaza, mass displacement of Palestinians, starvation policies and escalating violence in the occupied West Bank.

Israel’s global image has collapsed as human rights organisations, UN experts and international courts have warned of grave violations of international law by the occupation state.

The United States also suffered a dramatic collapse in global standing. Washington is now ranked among the five most negatively perceived countries in the world, below both Russia and China in international favourability.

Its net perception score fell from +22 per cent in 2024 to -16 per cent in 2026, a 38-point drop in just two years.

US decline came amid growing anger over president Donald Trump’s foreign policy, including strained relations with NATO allies, aggressive tariffs, threats relating to Greenland, cuts to Ukraine aid and Washington’s role in the US-Israeli conflict with Iran. The survey found that the US is now viewed as a major global threat, behind Russia and Israel.

The wider 2026 Democracy Perception Index describes itself as the world’s largest annual democracy survey. Unlike expert-based democracy rankings, it asks citizens directly how they experience democracy through questions on elections, freedom of speech, political pluralism, civic education, separation of powers, rule of law, government transparency and peaceful transitions.

The collapse in Israel’s standing comes as global public opinion has shifted sharply against the occupation state over its assault on Gaza. Since October 2023, Israel has killed over 74 thousand Palestinians, destroyed most of Gaza’s civilian infrastructure, displaced nearly the entire population and imposed conditions that UN experts and genocide scholars have described as genocidal.

For the US, the findings point to the steep cost of Washington’s continued military, diplomatic and political support for Israel. While successive US administrations have shielded Israel from accountability at the UN and continued arms transfers despite mounting evidence of war crimes, the survey suggests that global publics increasingly associate American power with impunity, double standards and destabilising wars.​
 
The citizens of that country might want to ask how things have gotten to this juncture. But I'm sure there are not a lot of people there asking.

A lot of learning awaits.
 

79pc people in Bangladesh view Israel negatively: Study

FE ONLINE DESK

Published :
Jun 06, 2026 20:09
Updated :
Jun 06, 2026 20:09

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-Reuters file photo

A majority of people across 36 countries hold negative views toward Israel and its Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, according to new research conducted by a US-based think tank.

An average of 67 per cent of adults across the 36 nations surveyed hold an unfavourable or negative view about Israel, compared to a mere 25 per cent who view the country positively.

The Pew Research Center conducted the study from February 8 to May 13 this year. Most of the survey interviews were logged right after the joint military operations by the United States and Israel in Iran on February 28, according to a statement.

People in Muslim-majority countries, including Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia, Pakistan, Turkey, and Palestine, notably hold a negative perception about Israel.

The study report finds 79 per cent of people in Bangladesh view Israel negatively. India registered the lowest anti-Israel sentiment among all surveyed nations, with only 28 per cent of Indian respondents holding unfavourable perceptions about Israel.

It says 97 per cent people in Turkey, 95 per cent people in Pakistan, 89 per cent people in Malaysia, 86 per cent people Indonesia, 85 per cent people in Palestine, 79 per cent people in Australia, 60 per cent people in US and 69 per cent in UK hold negative views about Israel.

Meanwhile, 90 per cent of people in Bangladesh expressed no confidence in Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. 95 per cent of people in Turkey, 92 per cent in Pakistan, 91 per cent in Malaysia, 88 per cent in Palestine, 74 per cent in the UK and 65 per cent in the US lack confidence in Netanyahu.​
 

Israel behind most civilian explosive deaths in 2025: report
Agence France-Presse . Paris, France 13 June, 2026, 01:21

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A man sweeps through the rubble of a building that was destroyed following Israeli bombardment after an evacuation order, at the Maghazi camp for Palestinian refugees in the central Gaza Strip on Friday. | AFP photo

More than half of civilian deaths caused by explosive weapons in 2025 were attributed to the Israeli military, according to a new Explosive Weapons Monitor report, which warned of a growing ‘normalisation’ of civilian harm in global conflicts.

The report released on Wednesday said over 22,600 civilians were killed by explosive weapons in 65 countries last year.

The toll is a 21 per cent decrease from 2024, due largely to ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon, said the monitor, which researches explosive weapon use and harms in populated areas for the International Network on Explosive Weapons — made up of nearly 50 NGOs.

‘Civilian harm remained severe, with 56 per cent of all recorded civilian deaths attributed to Israeli armed forces,’ the report said.

In 2025 Israel was at war with Hamas in the Gaza Strip following the Palestinian militant group’s October 2023 attack, as well as continuing its conflict with Hezbollah in Lebanon and fighting a 12-day war with Iran in June.

Particularly hard hit places included Iran, Lebanon, the Palestinian territories, Myanmar, Ukraine and Sudan, the report said, with state armed forces ‘responsible for 85 per cent of all incidents’ causing civilian harm or damage.

A statement announcing the report noted as well the ‘growing threat’ to civilian infrastructure and essential services.

It noted ‘the use of explosive weapons in attacks affecting humanitarian aid increased by 52 per cent in 2025’, with around 90 per cent of all incidents recorded being in the Palestinian territories.

‘When explosive weapons are used in populated areas, civilians suffer,’ said Katherine Young, the monitor’s Research and Monitoring Manager, in the statement.

‘What is particularly alarming is that this harm has become persistent across conflicts worldwide, risking the normalisation of civilian suffering on a massive scale,’ she added.​
 

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