Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

**My question to all of you is, how do u take this news? and it also fuled the heated debate on inside stories behind Malala issue…

LONDON: The UN Special Envoy for Global Education, Gordon Brown on Monday announced appointment of Malala Yousafzai’s father, Ziauddin Yusufzai, as Special UN Adviser on Global Education. He has been appointed to assist the work of getting every child to school by the end of 2015, an announcement early Monday morning said.
**The statement issued with the appointment said: “Worldwide, 32 million girls are not at school. Yousafzai, a former teacher and headmaster, will play a critical role in helping remove the discrimination and barriers that prevent girls going to school.

Brown will unveil on Monday a Malala Plan to get all girls to school by the end of 2015. He will ask supporters of girls’ education — who meet in Paris on Monday at the ‘Stand up for Malala’ event, under the auspices of UNESCO Director General Irina Bokova and President Zardari of Pakistan — to join a day of action on July 12th, Malala’s birthday.

Welcoming the visit of President Zardari to see Malala in Birmingham and announcing the appointment, Gordon Brown said: ‘With today’s announcements we show that as a result of Malala’s courage and her inspiration the whole world is pushing for education for every girl.

“We will prepare country-by-country reports of the gaps in educational opportunity. We will hold a summit with off-track countries in Washington on April 19th, which the UN secretary-general, the president of the World Bank and I will host.”

“Before she was shot, Malala was advocating the cause of girls’ education faced by a Taliban that had closed down and destroyed 600 schools. We now know from her family that when the group of girls she was with on a school bus was assailed by a gunman asking, where is Malala?” a fearless and defiant Malala did not scream and she did not cry — but simply replied ‘I am Malala.” She held the hand of her friend as she received what the Taliban considered her ‘punishment’ for the ‘crime’ of wanting education.

“If the Taliban sought to vanquish her voice once and for all, they failed. For today her voice and her insistent dream that children should go to school echoes all around the world, as girl after girl, each wanting all girls to have the right to go to school, identifies with Malala.

“To help in this global endeavour, Ziauddin Yousafzai, Malala’s father, will become a Special Adviser to the UN Special Envoy for Global Education.”“In time Malala herself is determined to join the campaign for every girl’s right to education and when she has recovered she will do so, becoming one of the leaders of that campaign. I can announce that after consultation with Malala’s family, there will be on July 12th next year, Malala’s own birthday, a day of action. We will invite children to march, demonstrate, petition and pray for children’s education to be delivered worldwide.”

http://www.thenews.com.pk/Todays-New…r-on-education

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

This is good, many of us have been calling them agents since the attack now feel free to call them spies. Besides how many of you guys remember Jahangir khan, a record breaking squash champion. We forgot him after his retirement, and later he was given a job by world squash federation. Maybe we don't deserve people like malalas father, who are working in riskiest places where we cannot even think of setting our feet.

for me the choice is very simple, a guy who Is running a school in swat, whose daughter brought into world notice the situation of swat while we were in deep slumber (people are free to call them CIA agents). But if I have to chose between them and the enemies of humanity I'll chose the former any day.

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

I belong to a small village in KP. I know how difficult it is to stand against the Taliban there. I have been to Swat. Its even worse there. In such a situation, when I see a father and a daughter taking a strong stance for education, especially girls' education, my heart goes out to them. I am with them and in my opinion, they deserve all the praise in the world. KP is at cross roads. On the one hand, we have these Taliban, on the other, people like Malala and her father. When I think about the future, I'd want my kids to live in the world of Malalas rather than that of Taliban. For me, the choice is simple.

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

What ever the Taliban and co don't like they call them American agent even we all are kafirs by there religious point of view SO in this case if they lebel them spies nothing new as per above post and we know how Malala and her family was under threat just coz the family took a stand against them on girls education. Taliban murdabad(^_^) good for Malala and her family.

Re: Malala’s father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

certainly i agree wid u all Malala is brave n courageous gal, no doubth but wht if she’s been used ? but if there’s any truth hidden it should come out in open!

https://fbcdn-sphotos-e-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/487043_501024689929083_721137678_n.jpg

Malala is being exploited by the pro-war lobby - Wikileaks tweets on Malala

Malala is being exploited by the pro-war lobby - Wikileaks tweets on Malala

WikiLeaks some recent Yesterdays tweet-

1. WikiLeaks ‏@wikileaks
1. The Guardian’s recent Person of the Year fiasco is illustrative of how the UK establishment and modern media work. Points follow (1-10).
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2. WikiLeaks ‏@wikileaks

  1. Decide to push pro-war Afghan war line by exploiting wounded girls similar to this CIA report released by WL CIA report into shoring up Afghan war support in Western Europe, 11 Mar 2010 - WikiLeaks
    Collapse Reply Retweet Favorite

3. WikiLeaks ‏@wikileaks
2. Front load the Guardian “Person of the Year” list with the target that will let the Guardian rip on and on about the evil Taliban.
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4. WikiLeaks ‏@wikileaks
3. This week, that’s Malala, a 14 year old girl reportedly shot in the head by the Taliban who has been exploited by the pro-war lobby
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5. WikiLeaks ‏@wikileaks
4. Create the Guardian candidate list and front load it with the intended winner (Malala)
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6. WikiLeaks ‏@wikileaks
5. To make readers feel like it’s not a sham, offer to have other entrants nominated. The Guardian did not have Manning as a candidate.
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Story.

It was very much a game of two halves. The overwhelming majority of early votes in the three-day poll went to Malala Yousafzai, the 14-year-old Pakistani girl shot by the Taliban for defending girls’ right to education. Malala, who is still recovering from injuries sustained in October, had 70 percent of votes at the halfway stage with many readers predicting a foregone conclusion. “What that kid did really focussed the world on the evil that these men can do - and what evil all people can do when they feel inclined. But it also showed the courage to pull through and the will of others to not succumb to evil,” wrote jamieTWC1.

But in the latter stages,** following a series of tweets from the @Wikileaks twitter handle telling followers to vote Manning, thousands of voters flocked to his cause.** Manning secured 70 percent of the vote, **the vast majority of them coming after a series of @Wikileaks tweets. **Project editor Mark Rice-Oxley said: “It was an interesting exercise that told us a lot about our readers, our heroes and the reasons that people vote.”

Guardian person of the year: Voters choose Bradley Manning | World news | guardian.co.uk

Thanks to wikiLeaks- it saved Malala from further exploitation-

Source: Malala is being exploited by the pro-war lobby - Wikileaks tweets on Malala

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

if the choice is between malala and taleban, we should support her. She hasen't killed any one where as her opponents have proudly claimed 40000 trophies.

There's no conspiracy in this, the killers have owned up on the attack and justified it through shariah . We should leave the girl alone and take to task those people who are bringing bad name to our religion.

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

^but do u think that ppl who call themselves taliban are the same who drove Russians from Afghanistan,dont u think that other elements underneath are using taliban's name for their own goals...America supports ppl like shakeel afridi becuz they worked for their agendas,America is not worried abt childrens killed by their own drones hence worried abt Malala only!

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

^ they are the same people that Pakistan army (With the help of CIA ) prepared for doing mercenary work in Afghanistan and India, now they have turned against Pakistan. Theres a saying he who digs a pit for others falls into that himself.

The issue is that for a second if i believe the conspiracy theory that these mischievous elements have nothing to do with Islam or taleban, have you ever heard fatwa against them or suicide attacks (Ideally it should be easy to give fatwa against CIA Agents)?

Look i don't support drone strikes But drones have killed 3000 people and as a result these animals have killed 40000.

Re: Malala’s father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

http://www.veteranstoday.com/2012/10/15/project-malala-the-cias-socio-psychological-intelligence-operation/

‘Project Malala’: The CIA’s Socio-Psychological Intelligence Operation

Unbeknownst to young Malala, she was picked up, groomed and her sincere intentions exploited by the world’s most notorious intelligence agency.

http://www.veteranstoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/adam.jpg

Re: Malala’s father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

**@Syed :here’s the link of the deatils of Fatwa against terrism n sucide attacts! by Dr Tahir Ul Haq :

English Books > Fatwa on Terrorism and Suicide Bombings - Islamic Library

**

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

On a smaller scale i Have seen political parties like pmln raising ghundas in the garb of student leaders but with the passage of time thy became a danger for the leadership of the party itself, and then they were assassinated in police encounters. The same analogy can be used to describe Pakistans relationship with taleban, they were created by us and now they have become a threat for the state itself.

Re: Malala’s father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

There’s no fatwa from the school of thought the taleban claim to be following.

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

sucide attack is a sucide attack whether done by taliban or else!

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

^ that's what I am saying but mention this infront of their apologists and they will start giving justifications for the same.

Re: Malala’s father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

Talibans were created to drove Russins out of AFghanistan,America created them,used them and left them for us to handle..

http://img546.imageshack.us/img546/6054/reagantaliban1985.jpg

Re: Malala’s father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

The issue lies here.

The Jamestown Foundation: The Jamestown Foundation

The Deobandi Debate Terrorist Tactics in Afghanistan and Pakistan

Muslim clerics following the Deobandi school of Islamic theology (named after the movement’s original seminary in Deoband, India) are now increasingly associated with the Taliban and other allied militant groups in both Afghanistan and Pakistan. Though the parent Deobandi seminary in India has distanced itself from the Taliban and their violent activities in both countries, Deobandi-affiliated clergy in Pakistan have squarely refused to follow suit. The parent institution has condemned suicide terrorism in all its forms, opposed attacks on shrines, barber shops and educational institutions and has even characterized the former Taliban regime in Afghanistan as “un-Islamic” (Dawn [Karachi], June 20, 2009). The Pakistani Deobandis have failed to adopt such an unequivocal anti-terrorism stance so far. Some 150 Deobandi clergy who recently met in Lahore for three days (possibly at the behest of the Pakistani government as some participants suggested) deliberated over the ongoing violence in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The scholars were expected to issue a consensual fatwa (religious ruling) against terrorist suicide attacks, but failed to do so.

Some Deobandi leaders fear their movement will be discredited by its close identification with militancy and terrorism. However, the hardliners attending the conference prevailed and in the final communiqué, diverted the blame for terrorist tactics away from the Deobandi movement:

“Militancy and terrorism continue to haunt this country in spite of wide denunciation of such acts [suicide bombings and subversive activities] by all patriotic people as well as use of organized military force. The situation calls for a dispassionate analysis of the fundamental causes [of this situation]. In our view it is the consequence of the foreign policy that Pervez Musharraf pursued [in the aftermath of 9/11] and the incumbent government continues to follow. We demand that the government separate itself from the war in Afghanistan and stops pursuing pro-American foreign policies and providing logistics support to foreign forces [for military operations in Afghanistan] (Dawn, May 2).”

Nevertheless, those in the Deobandi movement who oppose the growing trend to greater violence did manage to make their voice heard in the final communiqué:

“If the government is following erroneous policies, it does not mean that we set our home afire. We, therefore, confidently and honestly believe that only peaceful struggle is the best strategy that can help enforcement of Islamic Shari’a in Pakistan and secure it from foreign influences. The use of violence is contrary to Islamic teachings and detrimental to our objective of enforcement of Shari’a in the country and efforts to expel Americans from this region. Rather, it is helping the United States deepen its influence in this region.”

The Deobandi school has the largest number of religious seminaries in Pakistan and most of the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban either studied at these seminaries or hold the same theological and religious world view. Of a total of approximately 20,000 registered seminaries in Pakistan, 12,000 are run by Deobandi scholars while the rival Barelvi sect manages just 6,000 seminaries. Many of the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban leaders, including Mullah Omar, the late Baitullah Mahsud and Maulana Fazlullah have studied at Deobandi seminaries. All factions of the biggest religious-political party in Pakistan, the Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam (JUI), which forms part of the current government, also subscribe to the Deobandi world view and are led by clergy who studied at Deobandi seminaries and run many seminaries themselves. Sectarian movements like the anti-Shi’a Sipah-i-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP) and Lashkar-i-Jhangvi (LJ) and the anti-Ahmadiyya Alami Majlis-i-Khatm-i-Nabuwat (AMKN) are affiliated with the Deobandi school of thought. The international Tablighi Jamaat preaching organization also follows Deobandi beliefs. The Deobandi clergy is the most powerful in Pakistan, partly because it attracts those clerics who oppose the state. The roots of this attraction can be found in the Deobandi domination of militant training camps in Afghanistan and Kashmir (Daily Times [Lahore], June 14, 2009).

The Deobandi clergy have historically shied away from issuing anti-Taliban fatwas and have opposed those fatwas issued by other groups. When in 2005 a group of non-Deobandi clerics produced a collective fatwa that the use of suicide-bombing against fellow-Muslims was not permitted in Islam, severe criticism emerged from the Deobandi clerical community (Daily Times, June 14, 2009). Many non-Deobandi clerics believe that a fatwa would not make a difference to the current state of affairs anyhow because the suicide-bombers would not abide by it, and attacks would continue so long as the root causes are not addressed. Others, especially government functionaries, feel that such a fatwa would go a long way in developing a consensus in the fight against terrorists. They also believe that a fatwa would at least discourage the use of suicide bombings in sectarian battles with the Shi’a and would dissuade many non-militant Deobandis to be less sympathetic to the Taliban.

Such a fatwa has assumed even greater importance in light of the Taliban’s expansion into newer areas of operation like central and southern Punjab, Karachi and Baluchistan, the increasing involvement of Deobandi groups in suicide attacks against the Shi’a and growing evidence of Deobandi mosques providing sanctuaries to the Taliban. The Punjab government has now officially admitted that the Taliban are present in southern Punjab. A recent report filed by Punjab Police discloses that the network of the Taliban is fast expanding in the region and a recruitment drive has been launched in some religious schools. The report adds that Taliban leaders can be found at a number of seminaries in the Punjabi city of Jhang, several of which have launched a drive to recruit youths for training in the tribal areas of Pakistan (The News, May 17). Similarly, copies of forged national identity cards and alien registration cards belonging to activists and sympathizers of the proscribed Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) organization were recently found at a Deobandi mosque in Karachi along with stickers and posters eulogizing jihad, and receipts of donations (Dawn, May11).

The western province of Balochistan has also started to see the influence of Deobandization. Religious schools in Balochi-dominated areas, owned and administered by leaders of the pro-Taliban JUI, have dramatically mushroomed in recent times. Around 95% of religious schools in Balochistan are owned and administered by JUI leaders. This has given birth to more intolerance among the youth who now refuse to coexist with members of rival religious sects. This phenomenon is also being held responsible for a recent suicide bomb that struck Quetta’s Civil Hospital on April 16, killing at least 11 people including two top police officials and a television journalist (Daily Times, April 17).

All of the above examples show the expansion of Taliban activities into hitherto non-militant areas under Deobandi influence. A fatwa by the top Deobandi clerics would be an important step in stemming this tide and reducing suicide attacks both in Pakistan and Afghanistan. But though some in the movement favor such a step, more influential members continue to oppose it, citing the continuing importance of such tactics in resisting the international military presence in Afghanistan, and American military operations * in northwest Pakistan.*

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

Propaganda at its best by the talbanic monkeys on social media.. such as the images posted in this thread.
I will suggest mods to take off the offensive images and don't become part of conspiracy theories which can only come from defeatist mindsets.

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

^ i think we should counter by logic, we can censor things on this forum but the same things our brothers and cousins would be sharing on their Facebook's. It's better to respond.

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

@firenze n syed:kindly understand I'm not the one creating propaganda or any conspiracy,the thing is Wht ever news whether correct or incorrect is out there on Fb to Twitter,do u guys think by talking on this is like me spreading propaganda,my only interest is to know wether Malala is being used or not the gal is innocent,her goals are rite but these things create question in my mind that's it,if u wanna remove images u can but theyr on Fb...

Re: Malala's father Ziauddin Yusufzai named special UN advisor on education!

^ if she was being used did she deserve to be hit?

Does TTP exist?

I watched one program in which Samia Raheela Qazi was also invited. In the same breath she negated herself. First she claimed that Malala and her father were part of some conspiracy (like Pakistan Army or US targeted her), and then she questioned as to why she was propagating secularism there?

Doesn't make sense! Why would US target someone who is doing their dirty job?

Ok agreed, US did target her. But why did Taleban accept responsibility for something that their adversaries did? And that too citing examples from sharia!

I have seen propaganda pictures suggesting that she was not hit, and its all a drama. This might be a drama but the TTP is not. For God's sake they have killed over 40000 Pakistanis. Please open up your eyes and see your enemies.

The people who are opposing her don't have any justification.

Taleban are a reality (it's upto us to keep our heads buried in sand if we want to) and the deobandis haven't issued any fatwa against them. And if they don't this has the capacity to destroy their credibility as well. I don't know what is holding them back. Using the name of Islam to justify terrorism is discrediting the religion as well.