< %=imgalt%>
Panchang ~ Manmohan Singh ~ Sonia Gandhi ~ Stock Markets ~ Gossip
Home / India News / 2008 / June 2008 / June 17, 2008
Bush, Musharaf most untrustworthy leaders
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

Iran confirms launch of rocket with dummy satellite, US concerned

Republican National Committee: Obama's Rogue Anniversary - Obama Spends a Year Shifting His Position On Meeting With Rogue Leaders His First Year in Office

RNC - Obama: Wrong On Israel

Republican National Committee - Obama on Iran: All Carrot, No Stick

More on Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

George W. Bush

Bush poised to punish Russia for invading Georgia

US strike just an opening salvo in much broader campaign against Taliban, Qaeda inside Pak

Obama campaign unleashes ad mocking McCain-Bush ties

McCain is ready to lead America: George Bush

More on George W. Bush

Hu Jintao

US frustrated over Chinas refusal to come clean on nuke capability

Nepal PM to visit India on September 14

China visit most successful: Prachanda

Chinese President assures more assistance to Nepal

More on Hu Jintao

Gordon Brown

UK footie squad wins Biggest Waste of Space Ever title

Blairs female bodyguard forgets her loaded gun in caf‚s loo

UK Home Secretary warns that credit crunch turning Brits into racists

Fourth man charged over alleged al Qaeda plot to kill Brown

More on Gordon Brown

General Pervez Musharraf

Pak offers talks with India on intra-Kashmir trade

After assuming Presidency, Zardaris first trip will be to China

PPP leader claims pro-Musharraf elements may be behind PM life bid

Pak Education Minister reveals Musharrafs cousin received millions in UK

More on General Pervez Musharraf

Top News

Chiranjeevi launches names his new political party - Praja Rajyam

India, Colombia sign MoU for cooperation in hydrocarbon sector

Annie Leibovitz describes the Queen as cranky during photoshoot

Accused Kirsten Dunst burglar gets 4 1/2 year jail term

PayByCash(r) Named one of the fastest growing companies by Inc. Magazine

Eamon Sullivans booze and brunette therapy to beat Stephanie Rice blues

Hallucinations are caused by a transient form of blindness

Lap-and-shoulder seat belts as safe as child safety seats for kids

Bush, Musharaf most untrustworthy leaders

US President George W Bush and his Pakistan counterpart Pervez Musharraf are regarded as most untrustworthy leaders in an opinion poll.

New York, June 17 : US President George W Bush and his Pakistan counterpart Pervez Musharraf are regarded as most untrustworthy leaders in an opinion poll.

Musharraf fared worst in the poll. Only in China, 37 percent of the people felt that he instilled confidence as a leader, outweighing 30 percent people's opinion, a poll conducted by Worldpublicopinion.org found.

Nigeria remained divided over the Pakistani leader and the other 18 nations gave negative reactions for him in a poll conducted in 20 countries including India.

Bush got positive ratings only from India and Nigeria while respondents in Thailand shared mixed views. People from 16 of the 20 countries gave thumbs down to the US President. He also received the highest average percentage of negative ratings (67 percent).

Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was not far behind the two. He got negative ratings in 13 nations. Only three nations were slightly positive while one was divided.

While Musharraf was rated negatively in most nations, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon received largely positive ratings.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, though relatively new to the world stage, got positive ratings in six nations, more than any other chief of the state.

Chinese President Hu Jintao received mixed reactions from the Indian population but earned negative ratings in 13 countries. Only Nigeria, South Korea, Iran, Azerbaijan and Ukraine gave support to Hu, according to the survey done in countries comprising 60 percent of the world population.

On an average, 44 percent of those surveyed around the world expressed little or no confidence in the Chinese leader. Only 28 percent showed some or a lot of confidence.

In all cases, opinion of people of the country to which a leader belonged was excluded from the poll and the average ratings.

Polls were conducted between January 10 and May 6, and margin of error is plus or minus 2-4 percent.

The poll was conducted among 19,751 respondents in 20 nations, including most of the largest nations China, India, the United States, Indonesia, Nigeria, and Russia as well as Mexico, Argentina, Britain, France and Spain.

ANI

September 5, 2008

September 4, 2008

September 3, 2008

September 2, 2008

September 1, 2008

August 31, 2008