Taliban gunmen shoot 14-year-old girl activist
|
A
wounded Pakistani girl, Malala Yousufzai, is moved to a helicopter to be
taken to Peshawar for treatment in Mingora, Swat Valley, Pakistan on
Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2012. A Taliban gunman walked up to a bus taking
children home from school in Pakistan’s volatile Swat Valley Tuesday and
shot and wounded a 14-year-old activist known for championing the
education of girls and publicizing atrocities committed by the Taliban,
officials said. |
MINGORA, Pakistan
(AP) -- Fourteen-year-old Malala Yousufzai was admired across a
battle-scarred region of Pakistan for exposing the Taliban's atrocities
and advocating for girls' education in the face of religious extremists.
On Tuesday, the Taliban nearly killed her to quiet her message.
A
gunman walked up to a bus taking children home from school in the
volatile northern Swat Valley and shot Malala in the head and neck.
Another girl on the bus was also wounded.
The
young activist was airlifted by helicopter to a military hospital in the
frontier city of Peshawar. A doctor in the city of Mingora, Tariq
Mohammad, said her wounds weren't life-threatening, but a provincial
information minister said after a medical board examined the girl that
the next few days would be crucial.
Malala
began writing a blog when she was just 11 under the pseudonym Gul Makai
for the BBC about life under the Taliban, and began speaking out
publicly in 2009 about the need for girls' education - which the Taliban
strongly opposes. The extremist movement was quick to claim
responsibility for shooting her.
"This was a new chapter of obscenity, and we have to finish this chapter," Taliban spokesman Ahsanullah Ahsan by telephone.
The
shooting provoked outrage across the country, angering Pakistanis who
have seen a succession of stories about violence against women by the
Taliban.
"This attack cannot scare us nor the
courageous Malala. This cowardly act cannot deter Malala to give up her
efforts," said Azizul Hasan, one of the girl's cousins.
Prime
Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf condemned the attack and called her a
daughter of Pakistan. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland
called the shooting "barbaric" and "cowardly."
The
attack displayed the viciousness of Islamic militants in the Swat
Valley, where the military conducted a major operation in 2009 to clear
out insurgents, and a reminder of the challenges the government faces in
keeping the area free of militant influence.
In
her BBC blog, Malala wrote about not wearing her uniform to school
after officials warned it might attract the Taliban's attention, and how
many other students moved out of the valley after the Taliban issued an
edict banning girls from school. She wrote about the Taliban movement
had kept her family from going out after sunset.
While
chairing a children's assembly supported by UNICEF in the valley last
year, the then-13-year-old championed a greater role for young people.
"Girl
members play an active role," she said, according to an article on the
U.N. organization's website. "We have highlighted important issues
concerning children, especially promoting girls' education in Swat."
She
was nominated last year for the International Children's Peace Prize,
which is organized by the Dutch organization KidsRights to highlight the
work of children around the world.
Malala was
shot on her way home from a school run by her father, Ziauddin, who is
also known in the valley for promoting education of girls.
The
bus was about to leave the school grounds in Mingora, the largest city
in Swat Valley, when a bearded man approached it and asked which one of
the girls was Malala, said Rasool Shah, Mingora's police chief. Another
girl pointed to Malala, but the activist denied it was her and the
gunmen then shot both of the girls, the police chief said.
The
Swat Valley - nicknamed the Switzerland of Pakistan - was once a
popular tourist destination for Pakistanis. Honeymooners used to
vacation in the numerous hotels dotted along the river of the same name
running through it. But the Taliban's near-total takeover of the valley
just 175 miles (280 kilometers) from the capital in 2008 shocked many
Pakistanis, who considered militancy to be a far-away problem in
Afghanistan or Pakistan's rugged tribal regions.
Militants
began asserting their influence in the valley in 2007 - part of a wave
of al-Qaida and Taliban fighters expanding their reach from safe havens
near the Afghan border.
By 2008 they
controlled much of it and began meting out rules and their own brand of
justice. During about two years of its rule, the Taliban forced men to
grow beards, restricted women from going to the bazaar, whipped women
they considered immoral and beheaded opponents.
Taliban
militants in the region also destroyed around 200 schools. Most were
girls' institutions, though some prominent boys' schools were struck as
well. The private school owned and operated by Malala's father was
temporarily closed under the Taliban.
At one
point, the Taliban said they were halting female education, a move that
echoed their militant brethren in neighboring Afghanistan who during
their rule barred girls from attending school.
While
the Pakistani military managed to flush out the insurgents during the
military operation, the Taliban's top leadership escaped, leaving many
of the valley's residents on edge.
Kamila
Hayat, a senior official of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan,
said Malala's activism sent a global message that Pakistani girls could
fight for their rights. But she also worried that Tuesday's shooting
would prevent other parents from letting their children speak out
against the Taliban.
"This is an attack to
silence courage through a bullet," Hayat said. "These are the forces who
want to take us to the dark ages."
The
problems of young women in Pakistan were the focus of a separate case
before the high court, which ordered a probe Tuesday into an alleged
barter of seven girls to settle a blood feud in a remote southwestern
district. The tradition of families exchanging unmarried girls to settle
feuds is banned under Pakistani law but still practiced in the
country's more conservative, tribal areas.
A
tribal council ordered the barter in early September in the Dera Bugti
district of Baluchistan province, the district deputy commissioner,
Saeed Faisal, told the court. He did not know the girls' ages but local
media reported they were between 4 and 13 years old.
The Advocate General for the province could not confirm the incident.
Chief
Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry ordered Faisal to ensure that all members of
the tribal council - and a local lawmaker - who belongs to one of the
groups believed involved - appear in court on Wednesday.
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