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Pakistan Faces Daunting Uphill Task of Deradicalizing Educated Youth : Voice of America

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ISLAMABAD —

When Pakistani Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai returned to her home country after six years, she received a hero’s welcome: She met with Pakistan’s prime minister and delivered a nationally televised speech.

But not everyone was happy with her return to Pakistan, the first time since a Taliban gunman shot her in the head in 2012.

Posts on Facebook, Twitter and WhatsApp seemed to reflect the Taliban’s view of Yousafzai.

She was accused of being a CIA agent and of maligning Islam. Her opponents flooded social media with pictures and visuals showing students and teachers at a private school in Lahore chanting slogans, “I am not Malala” with anti-Malala placards in their hands. The protest was organized by a little-known organization called All Punjab Private Schools Association.

WATCH: Teachers, Students in Lahore Chant 'I am not Malala'


Radicalized views

What is worrying, experts say, it that the country’s educated youth seem to be echoing the radicalized views of militant groups.

The killing of student Mashal Khan at Abdul Wali Khan University Mardan in April 2017 is further evidence of such radicalization, experts say. Khan had been accused of blasphemy over his social media posts. An investigation, however, found him to be innocent.

E9577817-5398-4D87-A6C1-B5C3A9EFBE90_w650_r0_s.jpg

FILE - Pakistani demonstrators take part in a protest the killing of journalism student Mashal Khan in Karachi, April 22, 2017.
Muhammad Ismail Khan is a senior project manager at the Islamabad-based think tank Pak Institute for Peace Studies (PIPS). He told VOA that youth radicalization in Pakistan appears to cross all social structures.

“Extremists have attracted young people from rural areas and urban centers, madrassas and even universities, poor and well-off backgrounds, not only men but women, too,” Khan said, quoting the findings from PIPS, which were prepared with leading experts on the subject.

PIPS’ recent study also found “this universal radicalization is evident in the diverse way in which the Islamic State (IS) has been trying to recruit from Pakistan. The group has attracted former Pakistani Taliban militants from the underdeveloped Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) that border Afghanistan and where internet penetration is nearly zero, as well as motivated well-off individuals, including women from urban areas like Karachi in Sindh, and Lahore, Sialkot, and Faisalabad in Punjab.”

Historians note that Pakistani youth experienced a dramatic shift in their outlook in the early 1980s when the Soviet forces occupied the neighboring Afghanistan.

College and university students were encouraged to join the resistance against the Soviet occupation of a “brother Muslim country.”

In the 1990s, the state’s narrative promoted armed resistance against the forces in Indian Kashmir.

Experts say that a whole generation of college and university students witnessed the glorification of jihad and it’s not easy to unlearn that.

1EE64EC6-EAA9-4AE9-81CA-A106094FA120_w650_r0_s.jpg

FILE - A student memorizes the Koran at a madrassa in Murree, Pakistan Sept. 27, 2017. Madrassas are often seen as breeding grounds for radicalism.
‘All segments of society’

“There needs to be serious dialogue with youth,” said educator Qamar Cheema of the National University of Modern Languages (NUML). The “state needs to have structural approach with strong national narrative on issues which are crucial for national harmony, deradicalization plans for all segments of society are needed through national educational curriculum, and media debates.”

Recent statistics show that Pakistanis younger than 25 make up more than 60 percent of the country’s total population.

“Challenge of youth radicalization is there, we have to teach our youth in schools, colleges and need to consonantly tell them about the right path,” Lt. Gen. (Retired) Abdul Qayyum, who is a senator and a member of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N), told VOA.

Realizing the breadth of the problem, the military in May 2017 joined forces with the higher education commission at a seminar titled “The Role of Youth in Rejecting Extremism.” They sought to devise an outline to protect youth from falling to extremist ideologies.

Pakistan’s Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal also said educational institutions would be monitored through National Counter Terrorism Authority (NACTA) to ensure that extremist elements did not misguide the youth. NACTA was formed in 2009 and tasked to formulate a counterterrorism strategy.

But a series of recent incidents point to extremist behaviors in Pakistan.

In January 2018, a private college student killed a principal under suspicion of blasphemy in the Shabqadar area of North West Pakistan.

Student Faheem Shah has attended a rally of religious political party Tehreek-e-Labaik in Islamabad in December 2017 and skipped many classes. But when Shah was confronted by principal Sareer Ahmad over his absences, the student shot Ahmad.

94FF6968-E182-46B5-8B21-653C7A2419F9_w650_r0_s.jpg

FILE - Pakistani students of Islamic seminaries chant slogans during a rally in support of blasphemy laws, in Islamabad, Pakistan, March 8, 2017.
Blasphemy law criticized

“This killing was yet another shameful reminder of how easy it still is to manipulate the existing blasphemy laws to avenge personal grievances,” Dr. Mehdhi Hassan, chairman of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, told VOA.

Hassan added that the killing of university student Khan by a mob led to countrywide outrage and calls for the blasphemy law to be modified.

He said it seems no lessons are being learned from these incidents and that no apparent actions are being taken by authorities to prevent other incidents from happening.

“These incidents are further confirmation of the slide toward extreme intolerance in societies on the one hand and, on the other hand, the apathy and inability of the authorities to meet the challenges of extremism,” Hassan said, expressing his concerns.

Yousafzai, who was shot by Taliban for her efforts to promote girls education, was greeted with some positive messages as well. Her supporters see her as a symbol of defiance against radicalization and extremism in the country.

VOA’s Deewa Service contributed to this story.


https://www.voanews.com/a/pakistan-deradicalizing-educated-youth/4325201.html
 
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Pakistan shows a big middle finger to the USA.

Voice of America LOL Spoken like a true hateful American indeed.

We are going to bury these Americans and their hatred against Pakistan in the deserts of Afghanistan.
 
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Does Pakistan provide free education programs to all its citizens?most countries like India even provide free college education to backward communities. Maybe Pakistan can follow it , its a "success" in India so far.

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We are going to bury these Americans and their hatred against Pakistan in the deserts of Afghanistan.
This actually fits the title

Pakistan Faces Daunting Uphill Task of Deradicalizing Educated Youth
 
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USA faces an uphill task of de-radicalising the school students.
Pakistan faces a daunting uphill task of eliminating corruption more than anything else...
 
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Usually don't agree with VOA since it's literally American deep state influence but they are very right in this case. Sure there are other kids that deserve the same treatment and protocol that Malala has received each time you spew bullshit claiming that she's a foreign agent or what not you are literally mimicking the same premise that the Taliban attacked her for. How disgraceful is it that instead of showing solidarity with those who give a positive image of Pakistan we alienate them instead.
 
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I think by ' De-radicalising ' you mean accepting the American narrative rather than making their own.
 
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We should first correct our dysfunctional education system untill then the sociopolitical and economic environment will continue to breed such youth ..
Radicalization of youth is directly related to the quality of life of a person . while i don't agree on any fact stated in this article i do agree in the point of radicalized youth in both religious and liberal extreme..
And this has happened all because of an identity crisis not only in Pakistan but all of the ummah.
 
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Voice of America, run by Afghani haramkhor qoum-e-loot funded by USA. You will not come across more extremist people on earth then afghanis but VOA want us to believe its Pakistan fault. They blow up schools killing kids and give lecture to others. Malala isn't face of Pakistan extremism, she's face of Afghani extremism. We need to make this point clear to the world. Pakistanis are not against girl education.

Usually don't agree with VOA since it's literally American deep state influence but they are very right in this case. Sure there are other kids that deserve the same treatment and protocol that Malala has received each time you spew bullshit claiming that she's a foreign agent or what not you are literally mimicking the same premise that the Taliban attacked her for. How disgraceful is it that instead of showing solidarity with those who give a positive image of Pakistan we alienate them instead.

The reason some are against Malala is because world now believes we are against girl education. Hell I've yet to come across any Pakistani who says girls shouldn't go to schools even in backward rural areas. Malala while being on crusade need to make clear Swat was over run by afghanis who because of cultural reasons don't allow girls schools. As long as she make that point clear its all right.

She was accused of being a CIA agent and of maligning Islam. Her opponents flooded social media with pictures and visuals showing students and teachers at a private school in Lahore chanting slogans, “I am not Malala” with anti-Malala placards in their hands. The protest was organized by a little-known organization called All Punjab Private Schools Association.

This is stupidity at its best by VOA. "I am not Malala" placards were held by girl students. While afghanis are strictly against any girl education. Some people wrongfully believe Malala is agent of CIA, this have nothing to do with supporting Taliban. lmao
 
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Voice of America, run by Afghani haramkhor qoum-e-loot funded by USA. You will not come across more extremist people on earth then afghanis but VOA want us to believe its Pakistan fault. They blow up schools killing kids and give lecture to others. Malala isn't face of Pakistan extremism, she's face of Afghani extremism. We need to make this point clear to the world. Pakistanis are not against girl education.



The reason some are against Malala is because world now believes we are against girl education. Hell I've yet to come across any Pakistani who says girls shouldn't go to schools even in backward rural areas. Malala while being on crusade need to make clear Swat was over run by afghanis who because of cultural reasons don't allow girls schools. As long as she make that point clear its all right.



This is stupidity at its best by VOA. "I am not Malala" placards were held by girl students. While afghanis are strictly against any girl education. Some people wrongfully believe Malala is agent of CIA, this have nothing to do with supporting Taliban. lmao

You and I might not be against girls education but we do not represent all of Pakistan including the tribal areas. Doesn't matter if you and I believe in it at all because one look at the statistics will tell you otherwise. The education gap is somewhere around 20% which equates to about tens of millions of women. Even in middle class households let's be honest female education is a joke. It has no real purpose. Its used as a means of negotiation so the rishtay walay aunty can be convinced that the girl is "parhi likhi" so she can cut a better deal. When youve immobilised 50% of your population by default you can expect f*** all development, and that is why we need more voices of reason around us.
 
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You and I might not be against girls education but we do not represent all of Pakistan including the tribal areas. Doesn't matter if you and I believe in it at all because one look at the statistics will tell you otherwise. The education gap is somewhere around 20% which equates to about tens of millions of women. Even in middle class households let's be honest female education is a joke. It has no real purpose. Its used as a means of negotiation so the rishtay walay aunty can be convinced that the girl is "parhi likhi" so she can cut a better deal. When youve immobilised 50% of your population by default you can expect f*** all development, and that is why we need more voices of reason around us.

I'm not talking about quality of education but schools getting blown up which is afghani way of doing things. Malala need to be clear about why Swat schools were getting bombed.
 
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