Clarifying misconceptions: Malala answers her critics, says she is no Western puppet

Says Pakistan treats her as the daughter of the nation .


Afp October 14, 2013
Malala Yousufzai. PHOTO: AFP

LONDON:


Malala Yousafzai hit back at claims that she has become a figure of the West, insisting she was proud to be a Pakistani.


The 16-year-old, who was shot by the Taliban for championing girls’ right to an education, claimed she retained the support of people in Pakistan, and reiterated her desire to enter politics.

The activist was shot in the head on her school bus on October 9 last year for speaking out against the Taliban.



She was flown for specialist care in Britain, where she has continued her education, while she has been feted and honoured in the West.

On Thursday, she won the European Union’s prestigious Sakharov Human Rights Prize, while US President Barack Obama welcomed her to the White House on Friday.

Asked in a BBC television interview broadcast on Sunday about some people in Pakistan thinking she was a ‘figure of the West’ and ‘a Westerner now’, she said: “My father says that education is neither Eastern or Western. Education is education: it’s the right of everyone.

“The thing is that the people of Pakistan have supported me. They don’t think of me as Western. I am a daughter of Pakistan and I am proud that I am a Pakistani.

“On the day when I was shot, and on the next day, people raised the banners of ‘I am Malala’. They did not say ‘I am Taliban’.

“They support me and they are encouraging me to move forward and to continue my campaign for girls’ education.”

She highlighted the problem of education in the midst of the Syrian conflict.

“We want to help every child in every country that we can,” she said.

“We will start from Pakistan and Afghanistan and Syria now, especially because they are suffering the most and they are on the top that need our help.

“Later on in my life I want to do politics and I want to become a leader and to bring the change in Pakistan.

“I want to be a politician in Pakistan because I don’t want to be a politician in a country which is already developed.”

Published in The Express Tribune, October 14th, 2013.

COMMENTS (2)

csmann | 10 years ago | Reply

@Ammar: What do you attribute hundreds of girls' and even boy's schools bombed and destroyed to?And she never had said that Pakistani Government is not working hard for universal education.But Taliban have openly and violently resisted the girls' education ,and that is what she has always been saying.

Ammar | 10 years ago | Reply

Every puppet says that. I have traveled from Karachi to Peshawar including small towns. Education is a grave issue but not the way Malala portrayed it. My sister and her numerous friends study in a semi-tribal area of KPK. Most out of school kids are due to their poor and ignorant parents, not Taliban alone and those include girls and boys both (though girls' literacy rate is lesser). Everyone stands by your side, when Taliban loosers shot you, but you may also stand by the truth and don't defame your country, if you like.

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