Pak Taliban vow to attack Malala again
BY Agencies8 Oct 2013 5:53 AM IST
Agencies8 Oct 2013 5:53 AM IST
The Pakistani Taliban on Monday said schoolgirl campaigner Malala Yousafzai had ‘no courage’and vowed to attack her again if they got the chance.
Gunmen sent by the Taliban tried to kill Malala on her school bus on 9 October last year. She amazingly survived being shot in the head and has become a global ambassador for the right of all children — girls as well as boys — to go to school.
Having spread a message of ‘education for all’across the globe, the 16-year-old is now among the favourites for the Nobel Peace Prize, which will be awarded on Friday. But Shahidullah Shahid, spokesman for the main Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan umbrella group, slammed Malala and said they would try again to kill her. ‘She is not a brave girl and has no courage. We will target her again and attack whenever we have a chance,’ Shahid said.
Malala dismissed the threats and repeated her desire to return to Pakistan from Britain, where she was flown for treatment after the attack and where she now goes to school. She first rose to prominence during the Taliban’s 2007-09 rule in the Swat valley with a blog post for the BBC Urdu service chronicling the rigours of daily life under Islamists.
Gunmen sent by the Taliban tried to kill Malala on her school bus on 9 October last year. She amazingly survived being shot in the head and has become a global ambassador for the right of all children — girls as well as boys — to go to school.
Having spread a message of ‘education for all’across the globe, the 16-year-old is now among the favourites for the Nobel Peace Prize, which will be awarded on Friday. But Shahidullah Shahid, spokesman for the main Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan umbrella group, slammed Malala and said they would try again to kill her. ‘She is not a brave girl and has no courage. We will target her again and attack whenever we have a chance,’ Shahid said.
Malala dismissed the threats and repeated her desire to return to Pakistan from Britain, where she was flown for treatment after the attack and where she now goes to school. She first rose to prominence during the Taliban’s 2007-09 rule in the Swat valley with a blog post for the BBC Urdu service chronicling the rigours of daily life under Islamists.
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