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Malala Yousafzai is discharged from the hospital Legolas Send a noteboard - 04/01/2013 11:47:06 PM
Most of you have probably (hopefully) heard of Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani teenage girl who was sought out and shot in the head by the Taliban for having the audacity to write a popular blog in which she spoke up for girls' education. She survived and was treated first in Pakistan, then in Britain, while the Taliban further showed its true colours by announcing it would try to finish the job as soon as it could.

Fantastic news that she looks set to make a full recovery, the news about the family planning to stay in the UK for the time being is of course understandable, but also sad for Pakistan. Let's hope she gets the time and space to recover in peace and out of the media spotlights, but at some point in the future returns to Pakistan to continue her efforts. And that, one way or another, her near escape won't have been for nothing.

Source: NYT, but for some reason the board won't let me link.




Pakistani Girl Shot by Taliban Is Discharged From British Hospital



By DECLAN WALSH
Published: January 4, 2013


LONDON — Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani schoolgirl shot in the head three months ago by the Taliban for advocating the education of girls, has been discharged from a British hospital. Doctors said she had made “excellent progress” and would be staying with her family nearby before returning for further surgery to rebuild her skull in about four weeks.


“Following discussions with Malala and her medical team, we decided that she would benefit from being at home with her parents and two brothers,” said Dr. Dave Rosser, the medical director.

Video released by Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, England, showed Ms. Yousafzai walking slowly out of a ward, wearing a head scarf and accompanied by a nurse.

The release was a promising turn for the teenage activist. Her shooting brought global condemnation of the Pakistani Taliban, whose fighters killed six female aid workers this week in the same region in northwestern Pakistan where Ms. Yousafzai was shot.

On Oct. 9, gunmen halted her school bus as it went through Mingora, the main town in the Swat Valley, singled her out and opened fire. A bullet grazed her brain, nearly killing her, and traveled through her head before lodging in her neck.

Six days later, after emergency treatment in Pakistan, she was airlifted to the hospital in Birmingham, which specializes in treating British soldiers wounded in action in Afghanistan.

Medical experts say Ms. Yousafzai has a good chance of making a full recovery because of her youth, but the long-term impact of her head injuries remains unclear.

In recent weeks, she has left the hospital regularly to spend time with her father, Ziauddin; her mother, Toorpekai; and her younger brothers, Khushal and Atul. The Pakistani government is paying for her treatment.

Ms. Yousafzai rose to prominence in 2009 with a blog for the BBC’s Urdu-language service that described life in Swat under Taliban rule. Later, she was featured in a documentary by The New York Times.

Now her father, a school headmaster, has accepted a three-year position as education attaché at the Pakistani Consulate in Birmingham, making it unlikely that the family will return to Pakistan anytime soon. In any event, it may be too dangerous.

The Taliban have vowed to attack the teenager again, and last month hundreds of students in Swat protested against plans to name their school after Ms. Yousafzai, saying it could endanger their lives. After she heard of the protest, she too asked that her name be removed from the school.
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Malala Yousafzai is discharged from the hospital - 04/01/2013 11:47:06 PM 646 Views
she is truly an inspiration, and so is her family *NM* - 05/01/2013 12:11:27 AM 284 Views
That is excellent news *NM* - 05/01/2013 12:19:44 AM 251 Views
There is something eerily apropos about Kipling's "Arithmetic on the Frontier" to this whole thing - 05/01/2013 06:48:27 AM 731 Views
Thank God for drones. *NM* - 05/01/2013 05:16:36 PM 232 Views
That's wonderful to hear! *NM* - 06/01/2013 05:41:24 AM 388 Views

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