and where was the symbol before this incident, if she was that important army would have spent a lot less to keep her safe in the barracks, those wasted money is just a show piece which could be better used for poor girls and education and building schools of poor girls victims of north waziristan drone attacks
i dont see why she has gone to UK when she was already recovering in pakistan and all that money is not spent for her emergency condition but just for her child care
jis ke jitni auqaat hai us peh utna he spent kerna chahye, arfa karim's daddy was some big guy in the army and even she couldnt get to abroad for her situation, she got treated in army hospital and she even died there, compare that to this poster girl?
its like zardari going abroad on our money money for vacation
People like you make me sick.
I'm not even going to try to patronize you with a nice, organized tirade.
First of all, Malala campaigned for Education during the Taliban's rule in the Swat Valley, and even after -- when her identity was revealed and death threats were made to a
kid of 12-13 years. Can you, in your heart of a conspirator Zaid-Hamid lunatic, imagine that? Are the age of 12-13 an organization with thousands of fanatics, suicide bombers and a atrocious track record threatening you, for speaking out for your right to education?
Malala highlighted something very important and the way she did that is even more inspiring. Pakistan, as a nation, was created with equal opportunity in mind for both genders and all people -- that is the view that most Pakistanis have, that is the view that people in the Armed Forces fight for. Malala lived in a place where this was crushed and suppressed, yet she fought for it - she
fought for the ideals of Pakistan.
Now, can you imagine, when a child, barely a teenager, fights for something greater than it? Something that has effects reaching far beyond her locality, family life and social conditioning? She took a stand against an organization that has
bombed and killed thousands of Pakistanis.. We respect soldiers in the Armed Forces for being on the frontlines, but those men and women are trained, they're adults. This was a mere child that took a stand, for she firmly believed in the values on which Pakistan stood upon.
So, when the Taliban
planned her murder -- it wasn't a "one off", an impulsive decision - it was cold, calculated and evil; then all Pakistanis should recognize that it is not only an attack on an innocent child but an attack on the nation itself.
Tell me, how many children can you name in the world that have fought for something right in the face of the barrel of a gun and continued? What makes me sick is people like yourself and the "religious parties" in Pakistan tout female muslims from history - like Aisha - as an example of empowered women, but then you come out with a tirade of excuses and "but's" when you have your own Aisha.
Would you not want Malala to have the best chances of survival? Would you not want any child, regardless of how they came across such an injury, to have the best chances of survival?