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Girls throng to school in Swat as Malala addresses UN

 

AFP, Mingora, July 12, 2013, First Published: 08:32 IST(12/7/2013), Last Updated: 08:38 IST(12/7/2013), Source - Hindustan Times

 

Pakistani schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai bids goodbye to the staff of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham. AFP/ Queen Elizabeth Hospital

 

When the Pakistani Taliban shot Malala Yousafzai in the head, their message to the world was simple: girls have no right to an education and their dreams of a better future should be crushed. The attack portrayed the world's only Muslim nuclear power in an appalling light as Western leaders and celebrities fell over themselves to turn Malala into a global icon of child rights.

 

But while she gears up to address the UN General Assembly on Friday -- her 16th birthday and nine months since the shooting -- more girls than ever in her home, Pakistan's northwestern Swat valley, are in school.

 

Educationalists say it has less to do with Malala's fame and more to do with a growing confidence that far from being resurgent, Taliban influence is declining in Swat.

 

"Many students were actually scared when the government named a college after Malala," said Anwar Sultana, head mistress of Government Girls High School No 1, the oldest in Mingora, the main town in Swat.

 

Last December, around 150 girls at another school protested against the renaming of their college after the injured schoolgirl, fearing it would make them a target for militants.

 

They tore up and stoned pictures of Malala, since nominated for the Nobel Peace prize and now being privately educated in Britain, accusing her of abandoning Pakistan.

 

But Sultana says more girls are now going to school because people feel more liberated as more time passes since the Pakistan army quashed a 2007-9 Taliban insurgency in the valley.

 

"Whenever you suppress something, it appears with more freedom," she told AFP, sitting on a veranda as girls in long white shirts and baggy trousers poured out of congested classrooms.

 

"The Taliban banned girls education and threatened females for going to schools. Now more and more girls are joining schools which means the fear is over," Sultana said.

 

In the first six months of 2013, 102,374 girls registered at primary schools in Swat compared to a total of 96,540 during all of last year, said Dilshad Bibi, Swat district education officer.

 

At Sultana's school, there are no desks and chairs in the dark brown, grey and orange coloured classrooms. Instead the girls sit on the floor to pack a maximum number into each room.

 

Saeeda Rahim, 13, is one of those girls.

 

The Taliban stopped her and thousands of other girls from going to school between 2007 and 2009. When the army offensive came in 2009, she and her family were forced to flee for their safety.

 

Displaced for three months, she spent much of the time in tears, her dreams of getting an education and becoming a doctor in tatters.

 

"Those days were the most difficult of my life. I lost hope and courage. I had no energy to read. I thought I'd never be able to study again," she told AFP.

 

Then when her family returned home, her mother initially refused to let her go back to school, fearing that she could be attacked.

 

But she is now back at Government High School No 1. She covers her face with a white veil, wears the pink strip of a prefect and says she takes inspiration from Malala.

 

"I really like her speeches. I want to continue her work, I want to appear in the media and convince parents that education is a right for their daughters," she said.

 

There is certainly a long way to go.

 

Throughout Pakistan, nearly half of all children and nearly three quarters of young girls are not enrolled in primary school, according to UN and government statistics published late last year.

 

In Malala's northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province only 36% of women and 72% of men are literate, according to the government.

 

Muhammad Atif, the provincial education minister, says hardline Islamist militants have destroyed 750 schools since 2008, of which 611 have been reconstructed.

 

The new provincial government, led by the party of former cricketer Imran Khan, has increased its annual education budget by 27% and declared female education its priority.

 

"Our government has allocated 66 billion rupees ($660 million), the highest amount in the provincial budget for education and female education is our top priority," said Atif.

 

Azra Niaz, a teacher at Government Girls High School No 1, says Malala's defiance and determination to continue her education -- despite being so badly wounded -- was a true inspiration.

 

"Every girl has been encouraged. Their fear has stopped. Every girl now wants to become a Malala. They say 'we want to study and progress in life'," she told AFP.

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UN to hold special Youth Assembly on Malala’s birthday


Javed Aziz Khan, Friday, July 12, 2013, Source

 

PESHAWAR: The United Nations will hold a special Youth Assembly on July 12, Malala Yousafzai’s 16th birthday, to pay tributes to the services and sacrifices of the young Pakistani girl who was shot by the militants in October last year.

 

Born on July 12, 1997, Malala Yousafzai has probably become the only Pakistani and teenager in the world whose birthday will be celebrated in such a style. The UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon has already announced observing November 10 as Malala Day, a unique honour for any Pakistani.

 

In his recent op-ed in the Huffington Post Ban Ki-moon said, β€œOn July 12, Malala Yousafzai will be joined by hundreds of students from more than eighty countries in a unique Youth Assembly where diplomats will take a back seat and young people will take over UN.”

 

Malala is in the race for the Nobel Peace Prize as the youngest ever candidate for the biggest peace prize in the world. The Time magazine has featured Malala as one of the 100 most influential people in the world, carrying her picture on the front cover. The feature on Malala for the Times was written by Chelsea Clinton, daughter of former US President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

 

Malala shot to fame when she was nominated for the International Children Peace Prize by a Dutch organisation, Kidz Rights in October 2011 for writing diaries for BBC in favour of girls’ education in Swat. Her first diary appeared on January 3, 2009 when she was only 12-year old. Though she couldn’t win the award, a newspaper story prompted the then Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani to announce a cash reward as encouragement for Malala as well as giving her first ever National Youth Peace Award.

 

The then Chief Minister of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Ameer Haider Hoti also announced a cash reward while the Sindh and Punjab governments and public and private organisations honoured Malala in their own way.

 

After coming into limelight, she was seen attending talk shows on television channels and giving interviews to local and international media, advocating girls’ education and bringing an end to corruption in politics.

 

Despite threats to her life for publicly speaking out against Taliban, her family didn’t take precautionary steps that resulted in a shocking attack on her in Mingora town on October 9, 2012.

 

Armed men shot Malala in the head and neck when she was going home from school in a van along with fellow students. Two other girls Shazia Ramazan, who shifted to UK last week, and Kainat Riaz were also wounded in the attack.

 

As Malala fought for life at the Combined Military Hospital in Peshawar, where she was airlifted from Swat, the militants claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

After a three-hour operation, doctors successfully removed the bullet that had lodged in her shoulder near her spinal cord but she was still in coma.

 

Hundreds of thousands from all over the world stood by her and paid her tributes. Pop star Madonna dedicated one of her songs to Malala at a concert in Los Angeles while Angelina Jolie and Laura Bush wrote articles on the young Pakistani girl.

 

Laura Bush compared Malala to Anne Frank, one of the most discussed victims of the Holocaust. Indian director Amjad Khan announced making a film on Malala’s life.

 

Former British Prime Minister and presently UN Special Envoy for Global Education, Gordon Brown, remarked he was an ambassador of Malala. Brown launched a petition β€œI am Malala” to support the cause of education all over the world.

 

On October 15, an air ambulance that remained on standby at the Bacha Khan International Airport Peshawar shifted Malala to UK where she was admitted to Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham. After her release from the hospital in January, she started taking classes at a school in Birmingham.

 

Last week she left for United States to attend the Youth Assembly on her birthday. Pakistan has announced one of its top gallantry medals, Sitara-e-Shujaat for Malala besides naming a degree college and a few schools in Swat and rest of the country after the brave girl.

 

Malala has won a number of awards. She was named by Foreign Policy magazine on its list of top global thinkers. She was awarded Mother Teresa Memorial Award for Social Justice, Rome Prize for Peace and Humanitarian Action by the Mayor of Rome on behalf of the city government, Tipperary International Peace Award, Simone de Beauvoir Prize in 2013, Fred and Anne Jarvis Award by the National Union of Teachers in the UK and many others.

FM

Former U.K. PM Brown hails Pakistan's Malala Yousafzai as "powerful symbol" of right to education


By Jessica Hartogs, Pamela Falk, CBS News, July 11, 2013, 8:17 PM, Source


On the day of her 16th birthday on Friday, Malala Yousafzai, the then-15-year-old Pakistani girl shot by the Taliban for going to school, will address the United Nations in New York.


The Malala Day event has been organized by Gordon Brown, former British Prime Minister and now U.N. Special Envoy for Global Education. Watch a live webcast of her speech at 9:45 a.m. ET Friday on CBSNews.com.

 

"This frail young girl who was seriously injured has become such a powerful symbol not just for the girls' right to education, but for the demand that we do something about it immediately," said Brown in an interview Thursday with CBSNews.com.

 

Friday will be Malala's first public speech since she was attacked on her school bus last year.

 

"There will be no compromise with any religious extremist who says girls should not go to school or stop going to school at 10," said Brown.

 

"The girls' right to education in particular is a human right that should be observed in all circumstances," he added.

 

Malala will also present a petition of more than 3 million signatures to the Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, demanding education for all by 2015 β€” one of the United Nations' Millennium Goals.

 

The Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, said, "Education is the pathway to saving lives, building peace and empowering young people; That is the lesson that Malala and millions like her are seeking to teach the world."

 

In response to a question by CBS News on Thursday, the Secretary General's spokesman, Martin Nesirky said that Malala is a global symbol for the rights of girls and indeed all young people to an education.

 

"She is an eloquent and brave spokesperson for their rights and it is in this context that the Secretary-General will welcome her to the United Nations," Nesirky said.

FM

Malala Yousafazi to address the UN as friends in Swat Valley listen with pride

Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani girl shot in the head by the Taliban for going to school, will address the UN on Friday – the day of her 16th birthday.

By Ashfaq Yusufzai, Peshawar and Harriet Alexander,5:20AM BST 12 Jul 2013, Source

 

Malala Yousafzai checks in at Heathrow Airport on her way to New York

Malala Yousafzai checks in at Heathrow Airport on her way to New York and a day of destiny at the United Nations Photo: PA

 

The eloquent teenager has became a high-profile campaigner for the right to education since she was attacked in October. She will be accompanied by Gordon Brown, who as UN special envoy on education has taken up her cause with gusto, and joined by 650 other young people at the New York offices.

Seven thousand miles from the skyscrapers of Manhattan, in the Swat Valley village that Malala used to call home, Kainat Riaz was thinking of her friend, who was shot next to her.

Malala in hospital after the attack (PA)

 

β€œI have been waiting to listen to my friend’s speech,” said Kainat, 16. β€œI hope that her speech will revolve round girls’ education and would encourage female students – not only in Pakistan.”

 

Kainat was one of two girls beside Malala on the school bus when the Taliban gunman opened fire. Malala had from the age of 11 written a blog, under a pseudonym, for the BBC about her life in the Taliban-controlled area, where education for women was at times outlawed. She had also made a documentary for the New York Times about schooling for girls in Pakistan.

 

Her fame drew her international admirers – and also dangerous local enemies. β€œWhich one of you is Malala?” the gunman reportedly asked. β€œSpeak now or I shoot you all.”

 

The man who tried to kill her has never been found.

 

Ban ki-Moon, the UN Secretary General, said: β€œIn far too many places, students like Malala and their teachers are threatened, assaulted, even killed. Nowhere in the world should it be an act of bravery for an adult to teach or a girl to go to school.”

 

Pakistan has the world’s second worst record for children in education; only Nigeria has fewer young people in school. And despite international pressure, the government in Islamabad still spends seven times as much on the military as it does on education.

 

A report published on Friday by Save the Children said that almost 50 million children living in conflict-affected countries around the world are being denied the chance of going to school – whilst the number of reported attacks on education is rising.

 

Despite the high levels of children out of school and the sharp increase in attacks, levels of funding for education in humanitarian emergencies remain low.

 

Education funding has continued to fall from 2 per cent of aid in 2011, to only 1.4 per cent last year.

 

β€œEducation offers children in some of the toughest parts of the world the chance of a brighter future,” said Justin Forsyth, Save the Children’s chief executive. β€œThe attacks highlighted in our report are an attack on that future, robbing children of the chance to learn and fulfil their potential. Children who are targeted in this way will be paying the price for the rest of their lives.”

 

Speaking from her home in the Swat Valley, Kainat told The Daily Telegraph that she hopes to become a doctor, and to finish her studies in the UK. The British High Commission, she said, are helping her with a visa application. The other girl injured in the attack, Shazia Ramzan, is in the UK – alongside Malala and her family.

 

β€œIt is my dream to join hands with Malala, and struggle for the promotion of women education in Swat – where Taliban have played havoc with education infrastructure.” She plans to record Malala’s speech and circulate it among her colleagues.

 

And, despite the risks, girls in Malala’s hometown have been encouraged by their former classmate to continue with their studies.

 

Muhammad Munir, assistant education officer for Swat, said that the number of students at Khushal Public School – which Malala attended – has risen from 450 in 2010 to almost 600 now.

 

β€œNow even the poverty-stricken parents enrol their daughters in schools in this male-dominated society,” he said.

 

β€œMalala’s incident has given them courage and they feel emboldened,” said Abdul Hameed, a senior teacher at her school.

 

Mr Hameed, 51, said the students were waiting to listen to their old friend’s speech at the UN General Assembly.

 

β€œHer speech will further encourage the students. Majority of her classmates regarded her as brave girl and they would love to give receptive ears to her speech at the world’s highest forum.”

 

Spogmay Bibi, a student at the school, said that she had been taking on Skype with Malala ahead of her UN appearance.

 

β€œShe was always a role model for me, even before the incident which brought her into the international spotlight,” she said. β€œI will listen to her speech.”

FM

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