Malala — pride of the nation

By: Mohammad Zia Adnan

“My world has changed, but I have not changed,” she wrote in her autobiography, I Am Malala. In an NDTV interview a year ago, she told Barkha Dutt that she is afraid of ghosts, not of the Taliban. Now, two years after the shot from the gun that targeted her was heard around the world, the Swat-cum-Birmingham schoolgirl is the recipient of a Nobel Peace Prize “for her struggle against the suppression of children and young people, and for the right of all children to education”.

One would think that there is little to take issue with, as far as Malala’s rise to fame is concerned. However, for the virtual sceptics and conspiracy theorists, Malala is undeserving of recognition, or rather, is the main protagonist of an elaborate publicity stunt. Following the announcement of her win, the distinction between Western and Pakistani reactions was clear: those in the West lauded the youngest-ever Nobel Peace Prize winner, while some Pakistani reactions were replete with cynicism. I ask, is the advocacy of peace not a universal belief?

In some ways, this reactionary backlash against Malala is partly understandable. It is certainly true that she was only one of many schoolgirls in Taliban-controlled areas who struggled for their right to education. However, doesn’t her vocal call for change and improvement embody the voices of her peers, struggling to be heard? If a class has been dismissed for her former classmates, can’t she speak for them?

During Pervez Musharraf’s era of enlightened moderation, the General struggled to show the rest of the world, Pakistan’s ‘soft face’. In a 2004 Washington Post op-ed, he explained this new approach: “It is a two-pronged strategy. The first part is for the Muslim world to shun militancy and extremism and adopt the path of socioeconomic uplift. The second is for the West, and the United States in particular, to seek to resolve all political disputes with justice and aid for the socioeconomic betterment of the deprived Muslim world.” The General’s domestic agenda included a cultural liberalisation — pop and rock concerts, fashion shows and the celebration of art and culture became routine. Musharraf himself jumped onto the stage at a 2001 concert held in Karachi.

Alas, Pakistan’s soft face became mutilated by stories of assassinations, suicide bombings and the elephant in the room, the military dictator himself. Those with an intense distaste for Malala’s status as a ‘roving ambassador’ believe that her claim to fame affirms all of these things about Pakistan. I disagree.

While the circumstances in which Malala rose to prominence are unfortunate, her campaign is against a very vocal and radical minority, not against Pakistan itself; her detractors need to recognise this and come to terms with the fact that the schoolgirl is here to stay. As Pakistanis and believers in peace, we should stand by her and not worry about a supposed loss of credibility in the world’s eyes.

When Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy won the Academy Award for Saving Face in 2012, there was nothing but applause for the Oscar winner. Malala’s detractors — those who fear our reputation will somehow become tainted by the idea of bringing to light the threat of the Taliban to our stability — probably didn’t realise that a documentary on acid attack victims could have the same effect. Regardless, Obaid-Chinoy’s win is something that I, as a Pakistani, will continue to be proud of, just as I am proud of Malala’s struggle for education in a part of the world that is still dealing with the gaping wound of intolerance and radicalisation. While she may only be afraid of ghosts, this gaping wound is a genuine fear for the majority of Pakistanis.

Through Malala’s courage and determination, may we find the ability to stand upright once again, to show the world that the narrative of our nation is not one of oppression and cruelty; may we then be recognised and applauded for something other than exposes on acid attack victims, or shot schoolgirls campaigning for basic human rights.

The writer is a London-based student who has contributed to The Express Tribune Blogs and Pakistan Today

Express Tribune

Swat women foresee change after Malala’s Nobel win

MINGORA: Saima Bibi was just 13 when she was married off to settle a debt of honour, a common custom in Swat Valley where Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousufzai grew up.

A top student who got the highest marks in class, Saima was forced to drop out of school and give up her dreams of an education.

Now aged 22, she says Malala has given her the “courage” to speak up to her husband and in-laws to try to go back to school, and is determined her four children will finish their studies.

“When Malala’s picture was being printed in the newspapers, everybody in my family used to say it’s a conspiracy against Islam. But I liked her from the beginning,” she told AFP on a visit to a doctor in Mingora.

Also read: Malala Yousafzai, Kailash Satyarthi win Nobel Peace Prize

Malala’s award has been widely hailed by the country’s political leaders and the press.

It has also cast a spotlight on the abysmal rates of educational enrolment and literacy for children, especially girls.

While the 17-year-old campaigner was forced to leave Pakistan after being shot in the head by Taliban gunmen two years ago, millions of other children miss out on schooling for various reasons, including marriage, getting involved in work to support their families’ income, etc.

The Taliban razed hundreds of schools when they ruled Swat from 2007 to 2009 and while the militants have mostly been pushed back into hideouts in tribal areas, problems remain.

Some 25 million children aged from five to 16 in Pakistan are out of school, 14 million of them girls, according to Alif Ailaan, an education campaign group.

Ghost schools

Sumera Khan said she too was forced to drop out after eighth grade – not because of marriage but for a lack of schools where she grew up.

“I was fond of studying but…there were no middle and secondary level schools for girls in my village,” the 21-year-old told AFP in Mingora, as she prepared dinner at home while her two children played on the floor.

“My family did not allow me to continue education with boys in higher classes,” she added.

Sumera said she was inspired by Malala.

“She gave me courage to resume my studies and now I am planning to study privately…I will raise my voice for myself like Malala.”

Official figures show 69 per cent of boys and 44pc of girls are enrolled in primary schools in Swat, figures that drop to just 5pc and 2pc by the time they pass middle school aged 14 and enter secondary education – broadly mirroring national trends.

Iffat Nasir, a senior education official, said the majority of girls dropped out around the age of 13 to get married, while it is difficult for students in rural areas to access education.

“There is poverty in the region, so the girls start embroidery and tailoring work after primary school,” she said.

“Families also use them for domestic labour.”

Such issues are by no means restricted to Swat or the country’s militancy-wracked northwestern areas, with chronic underinvestment leading to around 7,000 “ghost schools” where the buildings stand but no classes are taught.

Classes may also not occur because of a lack of teachers.

`My father backed me’

Girls who are able to overcome the odds are often reliant on a strong male figure, like Malala’s father Ziauddin Yousufzai, to battle hostility from within their family.

Fazeelat Akbar, a 32-year-old doctor, said she hoped Malala’s success would help more men change their minds.

“I forced my family to let me continue my education after high school. I was determined to continue my studies and luckily my father backed me,” she said.

Observers have hoped the goodwill surrounding Malala’s Nobel win can be leveraged to improve the fortunes of all schoolchildren, but many are pessimistic.

“I don’t think (the government) will have a wake-up call and go `Oh gosh Malala won the Nobel now we have to make this a priority,’” said writer Bina Shah.

“They will say that `It is nice, we are proud of her’ and they are going to go back to doing the same thing.”

Back at the clinic, AFP asked Saima Bibi’s husband Javed Alam what he made of her plans to finish her schooling.

“I am thinking about it, and I will let her know,” he said.

DAWN

Man succeeds in tying knot with underage girl

TOBA TEK SINGH: A 35-year-old man, whose attempt to marry an underage girl was foiled by some media persons in Kamalia on Saturday, managed to tie the knot with the eight-year-old girl at some undisclosed location the very next day on Sunday.

Allah Yar told reporters on Sunday that his brother Muhammad Anwar called groom Abdul Jabbar and his guests at some unknown place where an unidentified nikah khwan solemnized Jabbar’s nikah with underage girl Fakhra Bibi.

Allah Yar had informed some journalists on Saturday that his brother Muhammad Anwar of Khurshidabad sold his eight-year-old daughter to Abdul Jabbar of Sahiwal for Rs200,000 and the wedding ceremony was going to take place on Saturday evening.

A group of journalists with movie cameras reached the house of Muhammad Anwar, but the groom, his relatives and friends managed to slip from the spot. When questioned, the nikah khwan claimed he had told Anwar that he would not solemnize the nikah of an underage girl.

Kamalia DSP Muhammad Usman told reporters that he would direct the City police SHO to investigate and take legal action if the allegation of underage marriage was found correct.

DAWN

Rally against teenage girl’s rape in Lyari

rape case

Karachi: The Baloch Human Rights Organisation (BHRO) staged a rally in front of the Karachi Press Club on Sunday afternoon against the rape of a 14-year-old girl in Lyari allegedly by people associated with the gang war. A large number of women and girls participated in the rally.

According to the BHRO, the girl was raped by armed thugs at a house on Gul Mohammad Lane on October 7. Her elder sister had to escape through a window and take refuge in a neighbour’s house.

The girl was kidnapped by thugs, raped and then thrown in the lane in an unconscious condition, and she was later taken to the hospital by area residents.

The agitating crowd said that when the neighbourhood people tried to get an FIR registered with the Rangers, they refused to lodge it.

They alleged that the Sindh government was patronising the gangsters who had been committing crimes and killings in Lyari and other Baloch dominated areas.

They pointed out that previously some Baloch women had been attacked by bombs in the Jhat Pat Market, Lyari. But now, the incidents of kidnapping and rape of women and even children were taking place frequently.

They said the situation had created fear and anxiety among Baloch women, alleging that the gang war thugs used to roam with Rangers in broad daylight.

They appealed to the Supreme Court to take suo moto action against the rape of the girl.

They also appealed to the Asian Human Rights for Women and Child Rights, International Women Development and International Alliance of Women to take notice of the gory incident.

The News

Policewoman tortured by her ex-husband

KARACHI: A lady police officer was severely tortured by her former husband with police not cooperating with her, local media reported on Sunday. The manhandled lady police ASI Rubina told local media that the police department is not willing to help her out, as they balked at taking any action against her husband, who is also from police department. The distraught woman reached Brigade police station. Police registered her complaint and sent her to Jinnah Hospital for the medical. However, the lady MLO is not available to conduct the test. It should be mentioned here that Rubina is on duty in Garden Police Headquarters.

Brigade police said the FIR cannot to be lodged until the medial report is received. It is pertinent to note here that the woman had already lodged a complaint against her former husband. Rubina said her former husband’s people are standing outside the hospital threatening to kill her, adding that her husband divorced her six months back; ever since, she is living all by herself with her only child. She further said they will kill me any time soon as she performs her duty with no security for her.

Daily Times