Malala meets Secretary Blinken, calls for stronger US support of Afghan women

Secretary of State Antony Blinken welcomes Malala Yousafzai, Pakistani activist for female education and a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, at the State Department in Washington DC on December 6, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 07 December 2021
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Malala meets Secretary Blinken, calls for stronger US support of Afghan women

  • Afghanistan right now is only country where girls do not have access to secondary education, Malala says
  • Secondary schools in Afghanistan have reopened for boys only and only men are permitted to teach

WASHINGTON: Human rights advocate Malala Yousafzai, who survived an attack by the Pakistani Taliban in 2012, argued on Monday for stronger United States support of Afghan girls and women during a visit to Washington.
"Afghanistan right now is the only country where girls do not have access to secondary education. They are prohibited from learning," the 24-year-old, who works with female Afghan activists, noted in remarks standing alongside US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
"This is the message of Afghan girls right now: we want to see a world where all girls can have access to safe and quality education," she added, while presenting a letter addressed to President Joe Biden from a 15-year-old Afghan girl named Sotodah.
Sotodah wrote in her letter that "the longer schools and universities remain closed to girls, the more it will shade hope for (their) future," according to Malala.
"Girls' education is a powerful tool for bringing peace and security," she added, reading the letter, "If girls don't learn, Afghanistan will suffer, too."
Secondary schools in Afghanistan, where the Taliban regained power this summer, have reopened for boys only, and only men are permitted to teach.
"We hope that the United States, together with the UN, will take immediate actions to ensure that girls are allowed to go back to their schools as soon as possible," Malala noted before a private meeting with Blinken.
Blinken, whose country this summer hastily withdrew its troops from Afghanistan after 20 years of war, saluted Malala as "an inspiration to girls and women around the world", and someone who "by her work, by her efforts, is making a real difference."


Pakistan police detain teen girl radicalized online in suspected suicide bombing plot

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Pakistan police detain teen girl radicalized online in suspected suicide bombing plot

  • The girl was targeted online by the Baloch Liberation Army, which was designated as a terrorist group by the US this year
  • In 2022, a female suicide bomber affiliated with the BLA killed three Chinese teachers near a university campus in Karachi

KARACHI: Police in Pakistan detained a teenage girl who was radicalized and recruited online by an outlawed separatist group to carry out a “major suicide attack,” authorities said Monday.

No criminal charges will be filed and she will be placed under state protection as “a victim rather than a suspect,” Sindh provincial Home Minister Ziaul Hassan said at a news conference.

The girl was detained during a routine police check on buses as she traveled to Karachi, the Sindh province capital, from southwestern Balochistan province to meet a handler, Hassan said.

The girl was targeted online by the Baloch Liberation Army, which was designated as a terrorist group by the United States earlier this year. The group convinced the girl that carrying out an attack would bring her honor and recognition within the Baloch community, similar to other women who have carried out suicide bombings against security forces, Hassan said.

“The girl appeared confused when police officers asked her routine questions,” said Hassan, who added that she was taken to a police facility and disclosed months of contact with militants through social media platforms including Facebook and Instagram.

The girl appeared with her mother at a news conference but her face was covered and her name and age were withheld. Police showed a video statement she made with details about her contacts with BLA and how she agreed to carry out a suicide attack.

Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar condemned BLA and other separatist groups for luring people toward violence and said detaining the girl prevented a potential large loss of life.

Baloch separatists have waged an insurgency since the early 2000s seeking greater autonomy and in some cases independence from Pakistan while demanding a larger share of natural resources.

Authorities said the group has attempted to increase its use of female attackers in recent years. A female suicide bomber affiliated with BLA killed three Chinese teachers in 2022 near a university campus in Karachi.