The 17-year-old activist, who was shot and nearly killed by the Taliban in Pakistan in October 2012 for insisting girls had a right to an education, said that Nawaz Sharif told her his government would support her if she decided to visit the country.
“He said my country is always there for me. And I said that it is my responsibility as a Pakistani to return to Pakistan and help people there,” Malala, who has made her home in Britain, told public broadcaster NRK, adding that any visit would have to coincide with her school holidays.
Pakistan’s education system, child labour and child marriage were also among the issues discussed, she added.
The ruling Pakistan Muslim League-N posted a picture of the meeting on its official Twitter account.
The prime minister and the teen met briefly on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in September 2013, but this was their first official meeting.
Both were in Oslo after attending the two-day Oslo Summit on Education for Development, where Malala urged world leaders to cut ‘eight days of military spending’ to give all children access to 12 years of free education.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 9th, 2015.
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