We introduce a qualitative logic for comparing strengths of belief and evidential support explicitly, discerning these two
comparative notions both syntactically and semantically within a modal logical framework. More precisely, we employ Dempster-Shafer
theory (DST) of belief functions to represent uncertain, possibly mutually inconsistent, and incomplete evidence, as well
as evidence-based degrees of beliefs. We propose a bi-modal logic that compares propositions in two ways: (1) based on the
strengths of belief an evidence-possessing agent has in them and (2) based on the degrees of certainty of the evidence supporting
them. (2) is the novel component of the proposed logic, designed to capture a notion of certainty-dominance among sets of
evidence, modeled via an Egli-Milner-like order lifting on individual pieces of evidence. We justify this modeling choice,
provide key (in)validities of our logic, and establish links to existing modal logics of evidence and belief (functions).