What's new

Malala Yusufzai: Victim of Barbaric Terror and Dirty Politics

images

In Pakistan’s Swat Valley, a girls’ school is gripped by fear

APTOPIX_Mideast_Emirates_Pakistan_Malala-0e722.jpg

Taliban shot 14-year-old ‘infidel’ who spoke for girls: A 14-year-old Pakistani activist who won international acclaim for speaking out for girls who were denied education under the Taliban was shot and seriously wounded in Pakistan on her way home from school, authorities said.

By Richard Leiby, Published: October 16

MINGORA, Pakistan — Under a portrait of Sir Isaac Newton, the ninth-grade girls clasped their chemistry texts, smoothed their white head scarves and movingly voiced support for the cause of their classmate, Malala Yousafzai, shot in the head by the Taliban last week because she advocated a girl’s right to attend school.

Malala-Yousafzai-receiving-the-National-Youth-Peace-Prize-by-Prime-Minister-Syed-Yousuf-Raza-Gilani-at-the-PM-House-in-Islamabad.jpg

Yousafzai receives the National Youth Peace Prize from then-Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani in Islamabad, Pakistan. Pakistan gave her the country’s first-ever youth peace award last year in recognition of her advocacy for girls’ education, which the Taliban had banned after seizing control of the Swat Valley.

“In our hearts is the thirst for education,” one 14-year-old told reporters brought to her classroom by the Pakistani military’s public relations wing Monday. “We want to show the world that we are not worried.”

It was a brave but ultimately false front. “We are worried for our lives,” the same girl confided later out of earshot of the army minder. She pleaded that her name and photograph not be used because she feared retribution by the Taliban.

The powerful army, which immediately took over Yousafzai’s care after she was shot in the head in Mingora, the Swat Valley’s largest town, says the attack Oct. 9 was an aberration, not an indication of resurgent militancy. In the main that seems true: Verdant, mountainous Swat, once a haven for foreign tourists, rarely sees violence, its residents say.

But Yousafzai’s shooting spoke to a larger truth: The threat of Pakistani Taliban attacks pervades the entire nation, especially the northwestern frontier and the tribal belt bordering Afghanistan. The instability persists despite massive military operations three years ago to quash the extremist group and the continued presence of troops in all seven Federally Administered Tribal Areas.

That nagging threat seemed reinforced when the military assigned a heavily armed squad from its Rapid Reaction Force, including a mounted machine gunner, to protect a small convoy of international journalists for a six-hour trip to Mingora from Islamabad.

“There is a security alert in this area,” a military official said. “That is why some precautions were taken.”

Soldiers were posted at every stop along the route, including the Khushal girls’ high school and college, which Yousafzai attended; the final, boisterous regional match of the Peace Cricket Tournament; and the police station where the open-backed, canopied van that had carried the schoolgirls still bore splashes of blood on its white benches.

Even so, parents here refuse to bow to terror: While 14 girls out of 31 in Yousafzai’s class did not attend school the day after the assassination attempt, on Monday only six were absent.

The attack grievously wounded Yousafzai — who was flown to England on Monday for specialized treatment — and left two classmates with lesser injuries. Yousafzai’s prognosis appears to be improving, but she faces long-term rehabilitation.

In the face of worldwide revulsion, the Pakistani Taliban has issued several statements attempting to justify her shooting.

The latest is a six-page disquisition e-mailed to journalists Monday night that twists Islamic history and scripture to reach the same murderous conclusion that has been denounced by Muslim leaders worldwide:

1538532671349897701.jpg

Yousafzai, 12 in March 2009, wants to become a politician and was relieved that schools in Pakistan had re-opened but scared that Taliban militants would forbid any schooling for girls after the fourth grade. Today she is recovering from a shot in the head fired by a Taliban gunman. The militants said she was shot because she promoted secularism. Veronique de Viguerie / Getty Images

“Malala was using her tongue and pen against Islam and Muslims,” the Taliban said, “so she was punished for her crime by the blessing of the Almighty Allah.”

In the religiously conservative, ethnically Pashtun Swat Valley, residents initially embraced the imposition of Islamic law, viewing the secular government and courts as unresponsive and corrupt. But their support faded during a reign of Taliban terror from 2007 to 2009.

The militants shuttered girls’ schools and blew them up. They flogged and executed people and left their bodies to rot in the town square for supposed noncompliance with the Taliban interpretation of sharia law.

The army routed the extremists led by Maulana Fazlullah, known as Mullah Radio for his sermons broadcast on pirated FM signals, and they relocated to eastern Afghanistan. The Pakistani military estimates that Fazlullah has 1,000 men under arms.

They and other militants regularly attack Pakistani security posts along the Afghan border, capturing soldiers and beheading them, but the army says the insurgents have been beaten back and are contained in a relatively small area.

Out of frustration, extremists resort to “sneak attacks” like the one on Yousafzai, a senior military officer told journalists in a briefing. “It is a one-off incident. There is no question and no room for a resurgence.”

Residents generally agree. “I think terrorism will never come back in Swat as in past years,” said Ahmed Shah, a member of the Swat peace jirga, a council of elders. “But we worry that the target killings will continue in the future.”

Riaz Ahmed said he also considers Swat to be much safer now — even though his daughter Kainat was wounded when the pistol-wielding assailant fired inside the van full of students, about 16 of them, after classes let out.

“We are determined that we will send her back to school — and to the same school,” Ahmed said in the small courtyard outside his home in Mingora’s winding alleys.

Kainat was inside, propped up in bed under a fuzzy blanket as she recovers from injuries to her thumb and arm. She looked overwhelmed by the knot of reporters and TV cameramen jostling and pushing in with their lenses.

Was she afraid of returning to school?

“I was scared at first, but not anymore,” the 16-year-old answered.


Hospital staff members tend to Yousafzai in Mingora, Pakistan. Ihsanullah Ihsan, chief spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban, said in calls to the media that the militant group targeted the girl because she generated “negative propaganda” about Muslims.

A few moments later, she said in a quiet voice, “I can’t sleep out of fear.”

In early 2009, Yousafzai published a pseudonymous chronicle of life under the Taliban on a BBC blog. She later won prizes and international acclaim for fearlessly speaking out for girls’ education in defiance of Taliban threats.

Photos of her meetings with Pakistani and foreign dignitaries line the walls at the private Khushal school, run by her father, Ziauddin Yousafzai. Many of Malala Yousafzai’s peers, like her, are well versed in English. They come from families of educators and military officers.

On Monday, chemistry rules were on the lesson plan until the journalists barged in. “The oxidation number of all elements in the free-state is zero,” said the text on the instructor’s podium.

Like 14-year-old girls everywhere, the students are prone to chattering, giggling and wearing chipped nail polish. But they sense no limits, looking toward careers in medicine, science and the military.

And Yousafzai?

“She just wanted the pen to be in her hand,” Principal Mariam Khalique said. “She wanted to study. She wanted other girls to study.”

Khalique, 28, said the school refused to close despite repeated demands by the Taliban. It finally ended classes the day before the army launched its Swat offensive.

Khalique nominated Yousafzai for an international children’s peace prize for which the teen became a finalist.

Despite the growing attention on Yousafzai, the school did not add security staff. “Ziauddin would say it’s in the hands of God,” the principal said, referring to the girl’s father, who founded the school. “I believe that, too.”

She was home tending to her toddler son when the frantic call came in about noon that her star pupil and two classmates had been shot.

Within hours, Khalique was on a military helicopter with Yousafzai; she also comforted her in the intensive care unit.

At first, authorities said a bullet had just grazed the girl. “It was to console us,” Khalique said. But then she learned that the bullet had crashed through Yousafzai’s skull and into her neck and come to rest near her spinal cord.

“She kept touching her forehead and her shoulder,” Khalique recalled. “Her throat was swollen, so she couldn’t talk.

“I knew she was feeling pain. She was pressing on my fingers, hard, because she could not scream.”

Soon tears came to Khalique’s brown eyes, the only part of her face not veiled in white.

“I can’t come out of this trauma,” she said. “I knew her as a baby.”

She spoke of her own preschool daughter. “I think Hana will also be like Malala,” Khalique said.

Later, amid the media scrum in the hallway, the principal introduced her child, who looked about 3 or 4. Hana warily extended her tiny hand to a stranger.

Khalique paused to take a call. Hana backed up against her mother’s long, shielding pink dress, searching for a place to feel safe.


 
.
Actress Angelina Jolie has written an essay sharing how she informed her children about Pakistani child activist Malala Yousafzai, who was shot early this month.

The 14-year-old girl, Pakistan's first National Peace Award winner, was shot and seriously injured by unidentified gunmen in the country's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province Oct 9.

She is currently being treated in Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, Britain.

In the essay written in Daily Beast, the actress wrote: "I felt compelled to share Malala's story with my children. It was difficult for them to comprehend a world where men would try to kill a child whose only crime was the desire that she and others like her be allowed to go to school."

The 37-year-old raises six kids -- Maddox, 11, Pax, eight, Zahara, seven, Shiloh, six, and four-year-old twins Knox and Vivienne -- with fiance Brad Pitt and the children gave solutions and asked question about the incident, reports dailymail.co.uk.

"Our 8-year-old (Pax) suggested that the world build a statue for Malala, and fittingly create a reading nook near it. Our 6-year-old (Shiloh) asked the practical question of whether Malala had any pets, and if so, who would take care of them? She also asked about Malala's parents and if they were crying," Jolie wrote.

"Still trying to understand, my children asked, 'Why did those men think they needed to kill Malala?' I answered, because education is a powerful thing," she added.

The hospital confirmed that Malala had a 'comfortable' night and doctors had been impressed by Malala's resilience.

But the Pakistani teenager needs 'prolonged care' to help her recover from the physical and psychological effects of the attack and it seems likely her treatment will take more than six months.

It is unclear whether it will ever be safe enough for Malala, whose name means 'grief-stricken', to return home. It is likely she will remain in Britain.

UN ambassador Jolie hopes Malala will be in contention for a Nobel Peace Prize.
 
. .
I heard she's well enough to give interviews now ?

BIRMINGHAM: Malala Yousafzai ‘remains stable’ according to the medical team monitoring her care at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital.




Malala spent a second comfortable night at the hospital and continues to be cared for by Queen Elizabeth and Birmingham Children’s Hospital doctors.




On Tuesday, the Medical Director of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Dav Rosser said Malala would require reconstructive surgery. He reiterated that that Malala had chance of making a good recovery.
 
.
I heard she's well enough to give interviews now ?

Apparently not, since there has been no interview yet. Doctors also say that a section of her skull has been damaged and will require re-constructive surgery. I guess any interviews will be held after such a surgery has been completed successfully.
 
.
BIRMINGHAM: Malala Yousafzai ‘remains stable’ according to the medical team monitoring her care at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital.




Malala spent a second comfortable night at the hospital and continues to be cared for by Queen Elizabeth and Birmingham Children’s Hospital doctors.




On Tuesday, the Medical Director of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Dav Rosser said Malala would require reconstructive surgery. He reiterated that that Malala had chance of making a good recovery.


Thanks to Allah swt for this good news.

And also thank you Zarvan. I wish to her a speedy recovery.
 
.
BIRMINGHAM: Malala Yousafzai ‘remains stable’ according to the medical team monitoring her care at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital.




Malala spent a second comfortable night at the hospital and continues to be cared for by Queen Elizabeth and Birmingham Children’s Hospital doctors.




On Tuesday, the Medical Director of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Dav Rosser said Malala would require reconstructive surgery. He reiterated that that Malala had chance of making a good recovery.

Wish her a speedy recovery.

And wish her attackers a speedy mental recovery.
 
.
. .
Excellent Article.

No, we're not all Malala

Bina Shah


Thursday 11 October 2012

Malala Yusufzai, the Taliban's reign of terror, and the brutal cost of cowardice in today's Pakistan
A novelist laments the suffering of a young Pashtun activist


153910844.jpg


Malala Yusufzai, the young Pashtun girl who wrote a diary of life under the Taliban which was published on the BBC Web site, was attacked by militants this week as she drove home in a van from school.

Shot in the head and neck, the 14 year old peace and education activist still lies in critical condition in the hospital, having become the unwitting symbol of resistance to the Taliban’s reign of terror, but also the symbol of our failure as Pakistanis to support those who put themselves so bravely at the frontlines.

The countrywide reaction to Malala's shooting has been one of uniform, widespread horror and disgust at the Taliban and their methods. Just two days after Imran Khan's anti-drone march, they have shown how they intend to repay the favor - by eliminating an icon of peace, education, and girls' and women's empowerment. They have said that they targeted her because she was a “Western-minded” secular girl who criticized them and that if Malala survives, they will target her again. She will almost certainly have to leave Swat, if not the country, for her own safety - a huge disgrace for the Pakistani government, who cannot provide security for any of its citizens.

Bakhtawar Bhutto said on Twitter that Malala was the symbolic child of Benazir Bhutto, another woman who died at the hands of the Pakistani Taliban and another failure of the state's security system. Imran Khan quickly called a press conference and condemned Malala's attack, while remaining silent over the fact that he wants to bring these very terrorists to the negotiating table. The president, the prime minister, and even the US State Department have condemned the attack on Malala, but the hypocrisy of our politicians, who will all claim Malala as their own and use her attack for their own political advantage makes me want to vomit.

We Pakistanis have abdicated our position as citizens to speak out against militancy and left someone as young as Malala to do it for us. We sit in silence and fear and we let a fourteen year old girl take the brunt of the repercussions of raising her voice against something we all know is wrong. Asad Umar of the PTI, Imran Khan’s party, said: “We Pakistanis love to outsource our political responsibility.” Nowhere is this more true than in the case of Malala, where we have left it to a child to take on the responsiblities that Pakistani adults are too scared to shoulder.

I am, however, all praise for the army who rescued Malala, took her to the local Saidu hospital, air-lifted her to the Combine Military Hospital in Peshawar, and have been caring for her while she fights for her life. She's been moved to the Armed Forces Institute of Cardiology in Rawalpindi today. Senior doctors operated on her this morning and managed to remove the bullet still lodged in her head. She's semi-conscious and stable, which is a huge relief. The military has been doing a stellar job of fighting militants, having driven them out of Swat in 2008, and they continue to bear the biggest losses in human life in this war.

I'm again reminded of the literary project, The Poetry of the Taliban, in which their hateful political ideology cloaked in verse has been given a voice. We are meant to feel these people are humans, that they too have hopes, feelings, and aspirations, as well as a valid viewpoint. But they have shown their complete lack of humanity again and again and again. They are evil in human form, inhabiting not bodies but carapaces, choosing war and death over peace and life.

Reaction pieces have been popping up all over the Internet, paired with a catchphrase growing in popularity: “We are all Malala”. But this is wrong. We distanced ourselves from Malala, we read her diary and watched her receive the National Peace Award, but we did not extend our support for her message until she ended up in the hospital, a bullet lodged in her neck. We have all failed Malala, and it just may be too late to make amends.

Malala Yusufzai, the Taliban's reign of terror, and the brutal cost of cowardice in today's Pakistan - Comment - Voices - The Independent
 
. .
[video]http://www.cnn.com/video/?/video/bestoftv/2012/10/16/ac-pakistan-teen-activist-recovery-process.cnn#/video/bestoftv/2012/10/16/ac-pakistan-teen-activist-recovery-process.cnn[/video]
 
. . .
I post the link below to an article by Hamid Mir, who I think is a covert Taliban sympathizer. He has received a 7 page letter from Taliban justifying attack of Malala. The article is in Urdu but I am addressing Pakistani Taliban apologists of this forum, they should be able to read it. I humbly request all those who have a soft spot for Taliban ( many of these members I hold in high regard) to kindly read it and comment; do they still think that Taliban are being wrongly blamed and that attack was a hoax with the sole objective of inventing a pretext for military action on North Waziristan?

Hamid Mir- qalam kaman- dhamki ka jawab - Jang Columns
 
.
Back
Top Bottom