BBC News – Shot Pakistan girl Malala Yousafzai thanks well-wishers

Friday, 9 November 2012. A 15-year-old education campaigner shot in the head by a Taliban gunman in Pakistan has thanked people around the world for supporting her.

Malala Yousafzai was flown to Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, after being shot on a school bus in October.

Her father Zianuddin Yousafzai said she wanted to thank well-wishers for helping her “survive and stay strong”.

Meanwhile, more than 60,000 people have signed a petition calling for Malala to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

Doctors in Birmingham, where Malala has been receiving specialist treatment, have said she stands every chance of making a good recovery.

She had campaigned for the rights of girls to have an education and had written a diary for the BBC Urdu service when the Pakistan Taliban controlled her home area of Swat.

‘Grateful and amazed’

Since the attack, the teenager has received thousands of goodwill messages from around the world.

Mr Yousafzai said in a statement issued by the hospital trust: “She wants me to tell everyone how grateful she is and is amazed that men, women and children from across the world are interested in her well-being.

“We deeply feel the heart-touching good wishes of the people across the world of all caste, colour and creed.”

In the UK, Shahida Choudhary has begun a campaign calling for Malala to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

She said: “Malala doesn’t just represent one young woman, she speaks out for all those who are denied an education purely on the basis of their gender. There are girls like Malala in the UK and across the world. I was one of them.

“I started this petition because a Nobel Peace Prize for Malala will send a clear message that the world is watching and will support those who stand up for the right of girls to get an education.”

Events are expected to take place around the world on Saturday to mark one month since Malala was shot.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-birmingham-20259845

BBC News – The other children of Pakistan’s war

Wednesday, 23 October 2012. The Taliban’s attempt to kill teenaged activist Malala Yousafzai in Pakistan earlier this month underlines the dangers that the militant conflict holds for the country’s schoolchildren.

Tens of thousands of school pupils have been displaced along with their families from areas across Pakistan’s tribal belt on the Afghan border where the Taliban have carved sanctuaries for themselves.

Thousands were deprived of an education as the militants carried out a persistent campaign against secular education, destroying nearly 1,000 schools since 2006.

Years of military operations in these areas have led to further destruction.

While militants have been driven out from some areas, the territory they once occupied has not yet been fully secured under a civilian administration.

And many significant sanctuaries still remain, especially in North Waziristan, parts of South Waziristan, the Orakzai region and the Khyber region.

Outspoken critic

From these sanctuaries, militants have been able to conduct raids on Pakistan’s military as well as civilian targets deep inside the country, breaching security cordons and creating an enduring sense of uncertainty.

Malala was an outspoken critic of the Taliban’s opposition to girls’ education, but she was only a schoolgirl and never believed that they would consider her a serious threat.

But while she was not the only child victim of this conflict, she may have been the only one targeted because of her views.

A year ago, Taliban gunmen ambushed a school bus south of Peshawar city, killing at least four boys and injuring more than 12, including two seven-year-old girls.

A Taliban spokesman in the nearby Khyber tribal region later said it was a response to the local tribes who had raised an armed volunteer force to resist the Taliban presence in Peshawar’s southern outskirts.

Children have suffered in other ways as well.

Pakistani officials claim more than 30,000 civilians and over 3,000 soldiers have been killed in the “war on terror” since late 2001. It is not known how many of them were children.

The latest United Nations report on the issue, released in April 2012, says that at least 57 children were killed in Pakistan during 2011 alone – mainly by landmine explosions, roadside bombs, shelling and targeted attacks.

This figure would be much higher if casualties from the country’s unending sectarian attacks are included.
Recruiting and indoctrinating

There are also recurrent reports of children being killed as unintended targets of drone strikes in Pakistan’s tribal areas.

The CIA-operated unmanned planes have carried out a persistent campaign against militants in their north-western tribal sanctuaries.

The media do not have free access to these areas, but in November 2011, British legal charity Reprieve arranged for a number of tribesmen to travel to Islamabad to protest against drone strikes.

The delegation included boys allegedly maimed by drone strikes, and men narrating eyewitness accounts of civilians, including children, killed in those attacks.

None of this can be independently verified.

What is confirmed, though, is the fact that the Taliban have been recruiting and indoctrinating easily-impressionable teenage boys as suicide bombers for attacks in Pakistan.

In February 2011, they used a 12-year-old boy to penetrate the well-fortified garrison in the north-western city of Mardan to attack army recruits.

Wearing the uniform of a school located inside the garrison area, the boy managed to slip past several security check posts and detonate the explosives vest he was wearing at a parade ground where the recruits were doing physical training.

At least 30 people were killed, most of them army recruits.

Three months after that incident, the BBC interviewed another would-be suicide bomber who was caught by the police.

Omar Fidai, 14, said he was part of a double-attack plan at a Sufi shrine in Dera Ghazi Khan city. He was to detonate his explosives near the rescue workers after his partner – also a teenager – had blown himself up killing more than 40 people.

But his vest did not explode properly. He was injured, but survived.

He said he was trained at a camp for suicide bombers in the North Waziristan tribal region, and was given to believe that he would go straight to heaven once he had killed the infidels and the heretics.

The UN’s 2012 report has recorded 11 incidents during 2011 in which teenage boys, some as young as 13, were used by armed groups to carry out suicide attacks.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-20041073

BBC News – UK doctors hopeful for Malala Yousafzai

UK, 16 October 2012. Doctors at the UK hospital where 14-year-old Malala Yousafzai is being treated after a Taliban gun attack say they are hopeful she can recover.

The Pakistani girl, who arrived in Birmingham on Monday, had a bullet removed from her skull last week.

The Taliban said they targeted her for “promoting secularism”.

Hospital Medical Director Dr David Rosser said some UK colleagues who had been in Pakistan believed she had “a chance of making a good recovery”.

“Clearly it would be inappropriate on every level, not least for her, to put her through all of this if there was no hope of decent recovery,” he told reporters shortly before Malala’s arrival at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham on Monday.

Doctors have already carried out a series of tests on the teenager and a hospital spokeswoman told the BBC they hoped to give an update on her condition on Tuesday morning.

Malala Yousafzai was flown from Pakistan via the United Arab Emirates by air ambulance, almost a week after she and two other schoolgirls were attacked as they returned home from school in Mingora in the Swat Valley.

She became widely known as a campaigner for girls’ education in Pakistan as a result of a diary she wrote for BBC Urdu about life under the Taliban, when they banned all girls from attending school.

The gunman who boarded the van in which she was travelling asked for her by name.

Surgeons in the north-western city of Peshawar removed the bullet that had entered her skull from close to her spinal cord and she was then moved to a military hospital in Rawalpindi for more specialist treatment.

A military statement said a panel of doctors had recommended she should be “shifted abroad to a UK centre which has the capability to provide integrated care to children who have sustained severe injury”.

Dr Rosser said that specialists at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham were “in a good position to treat her” because they had 10 years of experience in treating UK military casualties – and her condition was much the same as a “battle casualty from a physiological point of view”.

Once Malala recovers sufficiently, it is thought she will need neurological help as well as treatment to repair or replace damaged bones in her skull.

The Taliban have threatened to target her again. She was given tight security for her journey to the UK and officials in Birmingham said they also took security very seriously.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-19957402

The Asian Age – Malala Yousufzai attack: 3 brothers of Taliban commander arrested

Islamabad, 14 October 2012. Pakistani security agencies have arrested three brothers of a senior Taliban commander from Swat during a raid for alleged links to the near-fatal attack on teenage rights activist Malala Yousufzai, who is still on ventilator in hospital and making “slow and steady” progress.

The suspects, who were arrested yesterday in Nowshera district of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, were sent to an undisclosed location for questioning, officials said. The officials told the media that another brother of the three men was a senior commander in the Taliban faction led by Maulana Fazlullah, who controlled Swat till the army launched an operation there in early 2009.

The suspects were held a day after Swat district police chief Gul Afzal Khan Afridi announced that they had made an “important breakthrough” by arresting three other men, whose identity not disclosed, on suspicion of involvement in the attack on 14-year-old Malala.

Afridi had said police were hopeful of arresting Ataullah, the alleged mastermind of Tuesday’s attack on Malala and two of her school friends, soon.

Earlier, police and security agencies had detained dozens of suspects for questioning in connection with the attack. The driver of Malala’s school bus too was questioned.

Most of these people were released after questioning. On Malala’s condition, the military today said she was making “slow and steady progress.” “Doctors have reviewed Malala’s condition and are satisfied. She is making slow and steady progress which is in keeping with expectations,” chief military spokesman Maj. Gen. Asim Saleem Bajwa said in a statement.

Malala has been on ventilator since she was shifted from Peshawar to the Armed Forces Institute of Cardiology in Rawalpindi on Thursday after doctors removed a bullet lodged near her backbone. She was shot in the head and neck during the Taliban attack on her and two of her school friends on Tuesday last.

Bajwa said recovery from “this type of injury is always slow.” (PTI)

http://www.asianage.com/international/malala-attack-3-brothers-taliban-commander-arrested-394

Dawn – Malala Yousufzai sent to Britain for treatment: Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR)

Islamabad, 15 October 2012. Malala Yousufzai, the 14-year-old girl, who was wounded in a Taliban attack last week was sent to the UK for treatment, according to a statement issued by the ISPR on Monday, DawnNews reported.

The decision to send Malala to the United Kingdom had been taken after consultations with her family members and all expenses for her treatment would be borne by the Government of Pakistan, the statement further added.

Earlier on Monday, an air ambulance had arrived from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to shift Malala abroad as part of the contingency plans.

The government had said that the royal family of the United Arab Emirates had planned to send an air ambulance for the 14-year-old schoolgirl in case doctors decided to send her abroad for treatment.

Meanwhile, an ISPR statement on Sunday said that Malala had been taken off the ventilator for a while today, DawnNews reported.

Doctors are continuing to monitor Malala’s condition, military spokesman Major General Asim Saleem Bajwa said on Sunday.

“Doctors have reviewed Malala’s condition and are satisfied,” Bajwa added.

http://dawn.com/2012/10/15/malala-being-sent-aborad-for-treatmentispr/

The Hindu – Malala Yousafzai wave sweeps Pakistan

Anita Joshua

Islamabad, 13 October 2012. When gun-toting men stopped their school wagon in Mingora last Tuesday around 12.45 pm asking for Malala Yousafzai, none of the three girls inside spoke. This, despite the terrorists threatening to shoot all of them if they did not identify Malala.

Today, stirred by the braveheart, who dared to stand up to the Taliban, and her friends, Shazia and Kainat, who refused to identify her even under threat, girls across Pakistan are saying ‘I am Malala.’

This is happening not just on the social media – which offers a degree of anonymity and security – but also on television and on the streets; some with their faces uncovered. ‘I-am-Malala’ has been trending not just in Pakistan but also in Afghanistan where girls’ education is equally at risk from the very same elements.

On Saturday, the Afghanistan Education Ministry organised a nationwide prayer for her at schools. She is being likened to ‘Malalai of Maiwand,’ the ‘Afghan Joan of Arc’ who rallied the Pashtun army against the British in 1880.

In an echo of the Pakistan People’s Party pet slogan kitne Bhutto maroge, har ghar se Bhutto niklega (how many Bhuttos will you kill, every house will produce one), the refrain across the country is “how many Malalas will you kill?’’

As daily vigils are being organised to pray for the speedy recovery of Malala and her friends, girls were coming forward; willing to stand up and be counted. Her classmate from the Khushal Public School in Mingora, asserted: “Every girl in Swat is Malala. We will educate ourselves. We will win. They can’t defeat us.’’

If anything, the fate of Malala – who came to represent the ‘voice of the girls of Swat’ because of her blog, written under the pseudonym Gul Makai, in which she advocated girls’ right to education during the Taliban reign of terror over Swat – has made the media a bit circumspect about exposing the girls too much for fear that the terrorists might target them, too.

Still, at vigils and demonstrations, children are turning up in considerable numbers; a rare sight in Pakistan where crowds are avoided given the impunity with which terrorists penetrate. Even in Peshawar – where there are indications of various terrorist outfits regrouping and mobilising after a brief lull – girls are coming out in support of Malala; fearing that silence is no longer an option.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/malala-wave-sweeps-pakistan/article3994568.ece?homepage=true

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