Malala hamari beti hai......

Baqi sub sautelay hain.

With due respect and regards to Malala, the idiocy and hypocrisy shown by the government is just stupid. Malala is a cash cow that earns them preciously needed political points on every excessive and needless step they take using her name.

Im sorry, but hospitals in Pakistan are perfectly capable of providing Malala the medical care she needs. Then why was a PIA aircraft put on standby for so many days as an air ambulance? Why has she been sent to the UK for treatment on a UAE air ambulance? We all are somewhat aware of the costs involved in such treatment that is undertaken overseas. And if the Pak govt. has that kind of money, then idiots, why not use that money to make that kind of treatment available to every Pakistani? to the hundreds of children who have been shot and maimed since Malala was injured? Is it that they dont earn any political currency for you? Every news channel, morning show, talk show etc is about nothing but Malala. I didnt realize all other problems of Pakistan had already been solved.

Forget about the no-name kids who have been injured/killed since Malala. Heck, even the girls who were shot alongside her were not paid attention to, while Malala continued to enjoy 5 star treatment. And now after so many days, someone woke up and figured it would be politically prudent to shift Malala’s friends to Pindi hospitals as well.

And the milk that all the politicians are squeezing out of this cow even after so many days is pathetic. Put a fork in it already. When you are done with Malala, please pay attention to the other 18 crore, 99 lakh, 99,999 people in Pakistan as well. Your opportunistic behavior is sickening.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai…

Aik malala hi kyun?

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

Now wait till you are labelled as Taliban Sympathiser.

I totally respect Malala and her attackers are without ANY doubt "ANIMALS". I have written dozens of messages on social media in her support and will keep supporting her so that is NOT even a question.

I totally agree with you on the reaction though, she is surely not an average kid so does deserve a bit more attention but it is almost unblieveable how much this attack is getting media coverage at a time when 100s of Malalas are getting butchered every week in various parts of country. Even Malalas own friends have been totally ignored. I read somehwere that a kid who campaigned against drones just last week has been killed by a drone but hardly anyone noticed.
Anyone (including myself) who campaigned against drones is strongly criticised and labelled as extremist and Taliban sympathiser by so called liberals on social media (and media in general). This at a time when the whole world saw how innocent kids were being killed by US drones, it may not be a conspiracy but my point is that this is insult to all others who have been targetted by US donres, Terrorists, ethnic violence, religious violence etc etc.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

This is similar to the one beti of the extreme right "Aafia", although many more daughters have been meted similar treatment by the Americans during the past few years.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

There are valid answers to the question ‘Why Malama only’.

Malama represents a sentiment and values that Pakistani society in general have. That sentiments and values got associated to her due to her writings (her diary) and that is about ‘rejecting what Taliban Kharjees and other animals like them represent’.

That is the reason Taliban Kharjees targeted her and made effort to Kill her. Other girls who got hit were not targets but victims of circumstances. If they were not present around Malama at the time, they would have stayed safe.

So, when one talk about Malama one is not talking about just Malama, but one is talking about sentiments and values that opposes ‘Kharjees’ who hit her.

When Government and people show their support to Malama, they show their support to ‘Freedoms, Rights, Progresses, Choices, and Tolerances’ what Malama stands for and at the same time they also show their opposition to Kharjees and their values. Every voice for Malama and every penny spent on her by government (and others) represents rejection of Kharjees and their values.

As for ‘1000s and 1’ other girls and 10s of thousand other victims of Kharjee Animals, they were just victims of Kharjees without representing sentiment and values of Pakistan. Thus, their importance is their right as victims, but not as representing values and sentiments.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

Malala's diary made loud noises because she was writing for a foreign news agency, BBC. Had she been writing locally, as many others are, it wouldnt have made a difference and noone would have ever noticed her. This is the political aspect of it.

Beyond that, a person's importance is not judged by how many taliban are targeting him/her. Every human being is equally important, and deserves equal treatment and respect, which our government does not give. Only when something makes headlines is where our politicians step in to 'make a difference'. There are countless Pakistanis who oppose the taliban, in and out, and voice their opinions on the subject as well. Everyone has their own way of doing it. The attention given to her would make excellent sense if everything else was taken care of. But nothing is.

PIA aircraft on standby for almost 2 weeks. Cost? No doubt in the millions.
UAE air ambulance sent in. Partial cost may have been borne by the UAE, but the treatment abroad will certainly cost an arm and a leg.
And the bottom line. Isnt medical care available in Pakistan? We have one excellent hospital after another in the country. Everything is available. She SHOULD have been treated in Pakistan, if nothing else, then for the national pride itself. Instead, she has been flow in a UAE aircraft with UAE doctors, to a UK hospital. (And I remember a statement by Rehman Malik somewhere in between where he said that 'Mr. President will pay for her treatment abroad from his own pocket. We all know how that goes.) And from what I have seen in the news, the most dangerous part has been taken care of. Now she is in recovery mode. So what gives?
If the government has enough resources that they can afford such treatment to all its citizens, then more power to Malala. But sadly, the country cannot afford this. Perhaps Zardari can, but the country cannot.

Next thing you know, Malala and her family will be offered asylum by some western country.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai…

^ Malala is not a person. She is a symbol, as Sa1eem said.

Some people are voicing their opinions in support of this symbol, some are using it, some are abusing it for their personal agendas. Like our PM here talking to “Pakistanis” in English:

It would be nice if they are offered asylum abroad. We cannot really guarantee protection.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

Pakistanis go overboard on every issue....that's our nature. And on top, Pakistani media has worked like *sonay pay suhaga. *

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

Wrong thesis dude.

Malala becomes a symbol just like Anna Frank was of Nazi Germany. She is more brave then two face leaders like Imran Khan & Qazi Hussain Ahmed.

If a so called leader like IK can't have balls to issue a statement of condemnation I wonder what will he do if God forbid he becomes PM.

Politicians from PPP/MQM/ANP/PMLN are far better then likes of JI & IK when it comes to showing some "murdaangii" which they handsomely lacks.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

^ dont include PMLN there, as they are worse than PTI, no statement what so ever from them for or against TTP. Only PPP, ANP and MQM have been vocally speaking against taleban and have suffered a lot as a result.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

granted nawaz shareef didn't say a word yet but Shahbaz Shareef, Khawaja Saad Rafique & Ayaz Amir are openly condemning it. Ayaz Amir went far ahead and calling his top leadership silence as intellectual dishonesty.

Taliban Khan recent statements were enough for my whole family to totally discard this fine looking brainless idiot with more dividing nonsense for nation then combining the next four top class mullahs.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

^ have they condemned TTP openly? As far as I know Shahbaz Sharif previously said that his and taleban's thinking is the same. They have already cut a deal with the extremists in Punjab, with a result the terrorist strikes within the province have decreased where as the organizations based in Punjab are now terrorizing people in Balochistan, Karachi and FATA.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai…

PMLN Taleban bhai bhai… :slight_smile:

CM Shahbaz wants Taliban to spare Punjab | Latest news, Breaking news, Pakistan News, World news, business, sport and multimedia | DAWN.COM

LAHORE Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has said that the Taliban and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz both opposed former military dictator Pervez Musharraf and, therefore, he is surprised that this common stance has failed to stop the Taliban from carrying out terror attacks in Punjab.
**
“Gen Musharraf planned a bloodbath of innocent Muslims at the behest of others only to prolong his rule, but we in the PML-N opposed his policies and rejected dictation from abroad and if the Taliban are also fighting for the same cause then they should not carry out acts of terror in Punjab (where the PML-N is ruling),” he said at a seminar held here on Sunday to commemorate the services of late Mufti Muhammad Hussain Naeemi.**

The chief minister said that extremism and terrorism were the result of wrong policies of the Musharraf regime and the country was now paying a heavy price for those policies.

The chief minister claimed that the PML-N pursued policies which were not dictated from abroad and said that his party had taken a forceful stand on the Kerry-Lugar bill because it compromised sovereignty, integrity and survival of the country and it still had some reservations over the law.

He criticised US policies in the region and said it was only concerned about its own interests.

He said that although other political parties had also raised their voice against the US law it was the PML-N which had played an active role and made it a serious issue within and outside parliament.

He said that despite the passage of two years, the government had not repealed the 17th amendment and promises made in this regard had not been fulfilled.

He said the PML-N was against any accountability law which helped cover up corruption and such a law would be a grave injustice to the nation.

He said the PML-N believed in promoting democracy and stability of democratic institutions and its chief Nawaz Sharif had asked President Asif Ali Zardari not to address the joint session of parliament before doing away with the 17th amendment.

He said that unity and solidarity were the need of the hour and people would have to shun sectarian and other differences to steer the country out of the difficult time it was facing. He said the country needed a system that would ensure supremacy of justice and equitable distribution of resources among the people.

Without providing justice and basic facilities to the deprived people, he said, a bloody revolution might take place and destroy everything in its path. If justice was not provided and decisions of courts were not respected, people would lose faith in democracy and democratic set-up, he said. Urging Ulema to play a frontline role in promoting unity, harmony and brotherhood and finding a way out of the current mess, Mr Sharif said the country needed collective efforts to counter the daunting challenges of terrorism and extremism.

The Punjab President of Mutahidda Ulema Board, MNA Sahibzada Fazal Karim, Jamia Naeemia administrator Dr Raghib Husain Naeemi, Tanzeem-ul-Madaris Pakistan president Mufti Muneebur Rehman, Pir Syed Khalilur Rehman Chishti, Maulana Intekhab Alam and others also spoke on the occasion.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

Ann Frank would have been long forgotten if there were channels like GEO News etc in her days. We have become media-driven society, sadly.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

It is interesting to see that the people who benefit most from a system that keeps them in "business", keeps millions of our children uneducated and enable their own daughters and sons to study in the West are the most vocal about 'owning' Malala's 'mission' of girl education.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

^^^ The Pakistani army that gobbles billions of foreign aid and government's scarce resources every year should forego some of that undeserved largesse to let children like Malala get an education. All the more so since clearly the army and its "agencies" have been doing, at best, a grossly pathetic job at protecting those children and going after taleban that are busy destroying girls' schools with impunity all the while intimidating and silencing voices like her.

By the way, Bilal Musharraf was studying for his Bachelors degree in one of the most expensive American universities in the early 1990s even before his father overthrew the "bloody" civilian government. It's a university which does not give any financial aid to international students at undergrad level and which even most hardworking middle-class Americans cannot afford. Last I checked Bilal was no "qaum ka beta" so if the government of Pakistan can be forced to cough up that kind of money year after year to fill up the coffers of the many good-for-nothing army officers then I am sure a little amount can also be spared for Malala. At least she was not a coward like most of them.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

^ It would help if you actually read and try to understand what you are replying to, before you do.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

What would help even more is if you heed your own advice before making off-hand remarks. I was not just replying to you; I was addressing the concerns of all those who are lamenting that Malala is being made "qaum ki beti" with all the money that is allegedly being spent on her.

Re: Malala hamari beti hai…

Silver lining, if the sentiments towards this issue are used properly…

Can Malala Bring Peace to Pakistan and Afghanistan? : The New Yorker

The shooting of Malala Yousafzai, a fourteen-year-old student, along with her two friends by Pakistani Taliban has created intense anger in Pakistan. Pakistanis have spent days in prayer for her life as she lay comatose in an army hospital in Rawalpindi and, Monday, was put on a plane to London, under tight security, for a brain operation (the Pakistani government will pay her expenses), and have held vigils and marches in support of her vision of education for all girls. But they are now also calling on the army to carry out its much delayed offensive in the tribal territories of North and South Waziristan to wipe out the ever growing networks of extremists, including Mullah Fazlullah, who is believed to be the mastermind of the attempted murder of Malala.

**I live in Lahore and, like my neighbors, have spent this time watching the news and hoping that Malala survives. This is a simple human reaction, but one affected, too, by a sense of what she means for Pakistan. Malala may become a role model not just for girls in the region but also for peace. Her story now has the potential, if fully utilized, to bring about a serious geo-political change in the region that could actually help stabilize both Pakistan and Afghanistan.
**

For several years, the United States and NATO forces based in Afghanistan have demanded that the army carry out just such operations, but Pakistan has declined. After the shooting of Malala, there is unprecedented domestic pressure to finally do so. Pakistanis want to make it clear that they, the majority, do not support this brand of Islamic fundamentalism. If the army refuses to act now it may find itself ostracized by the very public whose support it seeks. On Monday, Interior Minister Rehman Malik was still insisting that there would be no operation in Waziristan—but the civilian government does not have the last word on any military operation.

**Fazlullah’s forces were defeated by the Pakistani Army in 2009 after the public was incensed by a video showing Fazlullah’s gunmen flogging naked women. The army, also under enormous American pressure, moved some 2.5 million people out of the Swat Valley and sent in eighty thousand troops to clear Swat of militants—except that Fazlullah and his commanders escaped across the border into Kunar province, in northeastern Afghanistan. From Kunar, which is under the control of like-minded Al Qaeda affiliates, the Afghan Taliban, and multiple other groups from Central Asia, the Caucasus, China, and Europe, Fazlullah has recently relaunched his movement, attacking army posts inside Pakistan’s tribal belt and then retreating back to Kunar, where Pakistan cannot touch him.

**
**Any military action in North Waziristan could only be taken, however, with corresponding anti-militant steps by United States and Afghan military across the border. So far, this has been a problem. Afghans officials have quietly admitted to me that Fazlullah’s actions are being backed by the Afghan intelligence services. (Officially, Afghanistan denies all such charges.)

**
**Afghan support for extremists like Fazlullah is, in a sense, return pay. Pakistan’s army has done exactly the same thing for the past twelve years—allowing Afghan Taliban to launch strikes into Afghanistan against United States and Afghan forces and then retreat back into Pakistan. Now both countries are more evenly balanced in this dangerous, brutal, bloody proxy war—one that is leading to open war, with Pakistan’s army shelling Fazlullah’s camps and Afghan villages in Kunar almost every day, angering the Afghan public who demand that Karzai take action against Pakistan.

**
**There are no American forces in Kunar to keep the peace, and very few Afghan forces. The United States has been silent on a flareup that could lead to “hot pursuit” incursions across the border and then a full scale war between the two neighbors. This could have devastating effect on the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2014. To complete the circle, the American military’s silence is, in turn, due to its unanswered demands that Pakistan attack North and South Waziristan and rein in the Afghan Taliban, especially the Jalaluddin Haqqani network, and cease destabilizing Afghanistan.

**
**The big change is that the public mood in Pakistan at present is playing directly to a moderate view of Islam, tolerance, democracy, and good neighborliness—or it would, if only there were a serious leader in the country who could take advantage of it. But the country lacks effective leadership.
**

**The mullahs, who have refused to name the Taliban as the culprits in the shooting of Malala—even though the Taliban has claimed responsibility—speculating that the shooters were working for the Americans, the Indians, or even for the army, are becoming marginalized for the first time in more than a decade. Other right-wingers who have suggested that Malala deserved to be attacked for supporting Western democracy have been ridiculed.
**

**Political leaders on the right, like Imran Khan—who has been sympathetic to the Taliban and has sought the advice of retired intelligence agents, reactionary mullahs, and others of the extreme right—have also been sidelined by Malala’s shooting. Khan has said that the Taliban are fighting a jihad in Afghanistan against an American occupation. His campaign to highlight the American policy of sending drones into Pakistan has fizzled at a time when more and more people regard the Taliban as the real threat. So, even as the army is under extreme public pressure to show its teeth and move into Waziristan, its core constituencies of right-wing politicians and mullahs have been weakened.

**
But the army will not and cannot attempt to clear out the Taliban as long as the Afghans continue giving sanctuary to Fazlullah. The fear is that any Pakistani offensive in the tribal badlands will lead to the bulk of the Pakistani extremists just fleeing across the border into Kunar and neighboring Nuristan. The Americans, busy with elections and withdrawal plans, are in winding-up mode, not in offensive mode. And so Afghans would have to be the ones to act.

If the Afghans would be willing to throw out Fazlullah and his men, then the Pakistan Army could embrace the previously unthinkable. Pakistan could prevent the Afghan Taliban from crossing the border, push them to negotiate a powersharing deal with Karzai—and then ask them to go back home. The next American President, whoever it is, should support such a settlement, rather than fighting to the last day of 2014.

**Since 9/11 the Pakistani military has failed to adopt a comprehensive strategy toward terrorism and extremism. Is this the moment for one to develop? For years, critics like me have been voices in the wilderness trying to point out that the military needs to change its narrative and stop backing extremists in the name of countering India if it is to allow Pakistan to develop as a modern state. Now could be that moment—one provided, tragically, by the shooting of a fourteen-year-old girl who is now fighting for her life. It won’t last forever.
**

Photograph by Veronique de Viguerie/Getty.

Read more Can Malala Bring Peace to Pakistan and Afghanistan? : The New Yorker

Re: Malala hamari beti hai......

If all you need is a 'condemnation' (urdu 'muzammat'), then why dont we just set up a printing press in Pakistan dedicated to printing condemnation statements, with a blank, where the politician can put in his name? That is what happens with the govt in power any way. 1 person is killed in Karachi......and Rehman Malik muzammat karta hai. 50 people are killed in Karachi, and Rehman Malik shadeed muzammat karta hai. And Im sure the relatives of the victims are thinking, oh, now that the honorable Malik has condemned the murder of our son, we feel so much better.
In Pakistan, condemnation is worth the paper its printed on.

As for Malala becoming Ann Frank, well if she does, more power to her. But how does that answer my questions? Do all other victims of terrorism, car accidents, robberies, muggings, or plain old age deserve any less medical treatment than Malala? It is the responsibility of the ruling power to provide such services across the board without any prejudice. In the west, if you go into a hospital, they do not ask you how you got that gunshot wound, or whether you have any money to pay for it. The first thign they do is fix you up with the best care they have. Then come the questions. In Pakistan, its the other way around. If you dont have any currency (financial or political), you are as good as a dead animal.

Yesterday the head of Neurosurgery in Agha Khan Hospital, Karachi, was talking to BBC, and he was asked as to why Malala was sent to London? Is medical care not available for her in Pakistan? He sounded quite embarrassed, not professionally, but politically. He made it clear that Pakistan had all the facilities that would have been needed by Malala...and more importantly, the most delicate part had already been taken care of. And that she was sent abroad more for political reasons than medical.

If a person becomes a 'mard' by issuing a 'condemnation', then our President and Interior Minister must be high class studs by now.