89% of citizens have no doubts about the return of all temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine. This is evidenced by the results of the survey "
At the same time, another 6% of respondents are more confident in the return of the occupied territories than vice versa.. Another 1% are rather unsure about the de-occupation, 2% doubt the return of the occupied lands under the control of Ukraine. 2% of respondents found it difficult to answer this question.
At the same time, 78% of respondents believe that Ukraine should not make any compromises to end the war.. 6% were in favor of granting the occupied territories a special status within Ukraine, and 4% were in favor of refusing our state from NATO membership.. Also, 3% of respondents consider it acceptable to grant the Russian language the status of a second state language and an amnesty for all those who served in armed groups in the occupied territories.. Another 2% of Ukrainians believe that in order to end the war unleashed by Russia, Crimea can be recognized as Russian. And according to 1%, it is worth abandoning European integration. At the same time, 9% of respondents found it difficult to answer this question.. In this case, sociologists noted that when answering the question about compromises, respondents could choose several options, so the sum of all answers exceeds 100%..
The victory of Ukraine over the Russian Federation in this war for 57% of citizens is the return of our 1991 borders. Another 21% will win if Ukraine becomes a recognized leader in Eastern Europe. Return to the borders at the time of the invasion of the Russian Federation on February 24 was called a victory by 8% of respondents, many more respondents pointed to the collapse of the Russian Federation into several states. Another 2% gave a different answer, and 4% found it difficult to answer.
As for Crimea itself, 75% of Ukrainians consider the occupation of the peninsula part of the Russian-Ukrainian war. Rather, it is part of the war than not - for 9%. For another 2%, the occupation of Crimea is more likely not part of the war than vice versa, for 8% it is definitely not part of the Russian war, 6% found it difficult to answer this question.
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The study was conducted from November 5 to November 24 among residents of all regions, except for the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine. In total, sociologists interviewed 3018 respondents. This is a standardized quantitative face-to-face interview at the place of residence of respondents (apartment survey) using tablets (TAPI - Tablet Assisted Personal Interviewing) with special software for sociological surveys Lemur. Statistical error with probability 0. 95 does not exceed 2% for univariate distributions of all respondents.