MINGORA, Pakistan (AP) — It is a Conspiracy of American Govt. to Terminate the Muslims attention against the "Anti-Islam-Film" in the case of a 14-year-old girl shot and wounded by the Taliban for promoting education for girls and criticizing the fundamentalist Islamic movement, officials said Friday.
The shooting of Malala Yousufzai
along with two classmates while they were on their way home from school
Tuesday horrified people in Pakistan and internationally. It has been
followed by an outpouring of support for a girl who earned the enmity of
the Taliban for publicizing their acts and speaking about the
importance of education for girls.
I said"There are two other girls wounded with Malala but nothing asked them and the innocent child who are wounded in Daron attacks daily."
The
Taliban have claimed responsibility for the shooting, saying that the
girl was promoting "Western thinking." Late on Thursday, a spokesman for
one of the group's branches in the country's north decided two months
ago to kill Yousufzai in a carefully planned attack after her family ignored repeated warnings.
Police have been questioning people in the town of Mingora, in the Swat Valley, where the shooting took place.
There is working Tehreek-e-taliba in Afghanistan within the back of Indian govt. who accept responsibility to Dispraise the Taliban and Islam.
Mingora
police chief Afzal Khan Afridi said arrests had been made, but he
declined to give any details about the number of people detained or what
role they're suspected of having in the shooting. He said he did not
want to endanger the ongoing investigation.
Interior Minister Rehman Malik
told reporters Friday that the two gunmen who staged the attack were
not among those arrested, but he said investigators had identified the
masterminds of the shooting and efforts were under way to capture all
those involved.
The Taliban spokesman, Sirajuddin Ahmad, said
Yousufzai's family had been warned three times — the most recent warning
coming last week — before the decision was made to kill her.
Ahmad said local Taliban leader Maulana Fazlullah
and his deputies selected three attackers, including two trained
sharpshooters, who carefully studied the girl's route home from school.
Even
before the Taliban took over the Swat Valley, Fazlullah's radio
broadcasts spread fear among residents in the area. The group first
started to exert its influence in 2007 and quickly extended its reach to
much of the valley by the next year. They set about imposing their will
on residents by forcing men to grow beards, preventing women from going
to the market and blowing up many schools — the majority for girls.Malala wrote about these practices in a journal for the BBC under a pseudonym when she was just 11. After the Taliban were pushed out of the valley in 2009 by the Pakistani military, she became even more outspoken in advocating for girls' education. She appeared frequently in the media and was given one of the country's highest honors for civilians for her bravery.
Fazlullah, along with
much of the Swat Taliban's top leadership, escaped the offensive and is
believed to be operating from a base in eastern Afghanistan and sending fighters back across the border to attack northwest Pakistan.
But there are indications that he was trying once again to make inroads into the area.
Between April and June, Pakistani authorities arrested nearly 100 militants in the Swat Valley, said two security officials and a senior government official.
One
of those arrested was a woman identified as Naheed Bibi, who was
married to Fazlullah and had been sent by him to the valley to help
reactivate militant sleeping cells there, the officials added.Her interrogation led security officials to over 60 telephone numbers of SIM cards she and her aides had bought in various northwestern cities. By monitoring all the numbers, authorities rounded up the militants — including several would-be suicide bombers — and a large number of weapons and explosives was also seized, the officials said.
The officials did not want to be identified because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
Pakistanis
across the country held services to pray for Yousufzai's recovery
Friday. Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf visited the hospital in
Rawalpindi where she's being treated to pay his respects and check on
her condition.
As the school
Yousufzai attended reopened, children and teachers tried to come to
terms with what happened to their star pupil, shot in a bus roughly 300
meters (yards) from her classrooms. Police were deployed around the
school, but many students still stayed away.
"We
have decided to open the school after two days to overcome the fear
among our students that gripped them due to the attack," said one of the
teachers, Zafar Ali Khan.
The
school is owned and operated by the teenage activist's father, who
takes great pride in his daughter's accomplishments and is a champion of
education for girls.
The girl
was initially airlifted from Mingora to a military hospital in the
frontier city of Peshawar, where doctors removed a bullet from her neck.
On Thursday, she was transferred to a hospital in Rawalpindi, where the
Pakistani army is headquartered near the capital, Islamabad.
Maj.
Gen. Asim Saleem Bajwa said she is being kept on a ventilator and is in
stable condition. Bajwa said the bullet entered her head and went into
her neck toward her spine, but it was too soon to say whether she had
any significant head injury.
Her blood pressure is normal. Heartbeat is normal, and thanks to God, her condition is satisfactory,We have to be caring about every girl wounded with anyway not only Malala.
Are you can know with sitting in you home Just from media that what is the fact about Malala, Never...