The Japan Times - Education activist Malala returns to a region in crisis

EUR -
AED 3.791853
AFN 77.454578
ALL 99.239639
AMD 406.076428
ANG 1.848048
AOA 944.092157
ARS 1087.445665
AUD 1.662047
AWG 1.859537
AZN 1.757805
BAM 1.956168
BBD 2.07039
BDT 125.053537
BGN 1.955243
BHD 0.389105
BIF 3035.271274
BMD 1.032359
BND 1.401664
BOB 7.101337
BRL 5.995839
BSD 1.025403
BTN 89.342815
BWP 14.41013
BYN 3.355832
BYR 20234.242326
BZD 2.059788
CAD 1.49275
CDF 2942.223645
CHF 0.940774
CLF 0.036877
CLP 1017.545222
CNY 7.424828
CNH 7.539062
COP 4297.113007
CRC 522.398322
CUC 1.032359
CUP 27.357522
CVE 110.285757
CZK 25.216428
DJF 182.604368
DKK 7.460737
DOP 63.721993
DZD 140.019905
EGP 51.982489
ERN 15.48539
ETB 131.169658
FJD 2.400335
FKP 0.850238
GBP 0.830833
GEL 2.931892
GGP 0.850238
GHS 15.662948
GIP 0.850238
GMD 74.853296
GNF 8862.66806
GTQ 7.934493
GYD 214.530377
HKD 8.042538
HNL 26.12217
HRK 7.618345
HTG 134.125244
HUF 408.471547
IDR 16882.842705
ILS 3.691872
IMP 0.850238
INR 89.783514
IQD 1343.252816
IRR 43462.327046
ISK 146.202264
JEP 0.850238
JMD 161.620419
JOD 0.732356
JPY 160.108379
KES 133.174249
KGS 90.280104
KHR 4123.776144
KMF 494.344936
KPW 929.123487
KRW 1506.630331
KWD 0.3187
KYD 0.854561
KZT 535.910865
LAK 22304.197916
LBP 91826.182783
LKR 307.177815
LRD 204.055441
LSL 19.39115
LTL 3.048289
LVL 0.624464
LYD 5.034948
MAD 10.351048
MDL 19.211616
MGA 4895.921471
MKD 61.535853
MMK 3353.062744
MNT 3507.95702
MOP 8.231849
MRU 40.96571
MUR 48.828034
MVR 15.901215
MWK 1778.134666
MXN 21.063331
MYR 4.597109
MZN 65.977305
NAD 19.39115
NGN 1530.823897
NIO 37.737103
NOK 11.734451
NPR 142.948905
NZD 1.838198
OMR 0.397436
PAB 1.025393
PEN 3.822119
PGK 4.114774
PHP 60.241777
PKR 286.094418
PLN 4.231259
PYG 8085.521792
QAR 3.739104
RON 4.976692
RSD 117.130441
RUB 102.977899
RWF 1449.472808
SAR 3.872091
SBD 8.749436
SCR 14.796277
SDG 620.447958
SEK 11.44808
SGD 1.402661
SHP 0.850238
SLE 23.641543
SLL 21648.058308
SOS 586.010294
SRD 36.240942
STD 21367.753233
SVC 8.972819
SYP 13422.735634
SZL 19.384836
THB 34.92574
TJS 11.176941
TMT 3.613258
TND 3.310123
TOP 2.417892
TRY 37.17763
TTD 6.952309
TWD 34.023979
TZS 2633.310131
UAH 42.886272
UGX 3771.709881
USD 1.032359
UYU 44.44772
UZS 13315.506137
VES 60.359713
VND 26087.71957
VUV 122.563769
WST 2.89146
XAF 656.080482
XAG 0.032658
XAU 0.000366
XCD 2.790003
XDR 0.786448
XOF 656.080482
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.850587
ZAR 19.327986
ZMK 9292.449735
ZMW 28.788418
ZWL 332.419274
  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    7.35

    -1.9%

  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    66.27

    +0.41%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    49.85

    -0.08%

  • BTI

    0.1000

    39.74

    +0.25%

  • SCS

    -0.4100

    11.07

    -3.7%

  • NGG

    0.6100

    62.01

    +0.98%

  • GSK

    -0.3700

    34.9

    -1.06%

  • BP

    -0.1900

    30.87

    -0.62%

  • RIO

    -0.5600

    59.85

    -0.94%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    23.35

    -0.51%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    8.49

    -0.59%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    12.46

    -0.56%

  • BCC

    -1.0200

    125.14

    -0.82%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    24.03

    +1%

  • AZN

    -0.9000

    69.86

    -1.29%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    23.75

    -0.38%

Education activist Malala returns to a region in crisis
Education activist Malala returns to a region in crisis / Photo: Aamir QURESHI - AFP

Education activist Malala returns to a region in crisis

Twelve years after she was evacuated out of Pakistan as a badly wounded schoolgirl, Malala Yousafzai has returned to her home country at a critical time for girls' education.

Text size:

"For her, it is a homecoming to a region that shaped who she is today, but also a reminder of the work still left unfinished," Yousafzai's friend and fellow rights activist Nighat Dad told AFP.

Millions more families are living in poverty while more than a third of children are still out of school, as the cash-strapped state grapples with cycles of political chaos and resurging militancy.

In neighbouring Afghanistan, the Taliban have returned to power and imposed an austere interpretation of Islamic law that includes banning girls from studying at secondary school and university.

This weekend, 27-year-old Yousafzai was the guest of honour at a global summit on girls' education in Islamic nations hosted by Islamabad, where she called on leaders to stand up for Muslim girls.

"Her presence in Pakistan during such a time is a message to those in power: the fight for education cannot be silenced, whether it's in the Swat Valley or across the border in Afghanistan," Dad added.

In 2012 at the age of 15, Yousafzai was shot in the head while on her way home from school by a Pakistan Taliban militant incensed by an education blog she wrote.

At the time, an insurgency against the government had spread to her remote, picturesque Swat Valley and militants had ordered girls to stay home.

Across the frontier, the war raged between NATO forces and the Afghan Taliban, a separate but closely linked group from the Pakistan Taliban which flourished in the border regions.

- 'Malala is a paradox' -

Always flanked by heavy security, Yousafzai has made only a handful of public visits to Pakistan since her evacuation to Britain, where she made a remarkable recovery and went on to become the youngest Nobel Prize winner at the age of 17.

Since then she has frequently shared the world stage with international leaders.

But Pakistan's relationship with her is complicated: a symbol of resilience and pride to some, and a stooge of the West to others, in a country where Islam is perceived as under threat by creeping Western values.

Sanam Maher, an author who has written about high-profile Pakistani women, told AFP that Yousafzai is a "contentious figure".

"There's a perception of her being 'handled' or 'managed', which creates distrust", she said.

"There are many who criticise Malala for her absence in Pakistan," she added. "They are indifferent to her commitment."

Still, Yousafzai retains star power in Pakistan, especially among young girls.

"Malala is an icon and a powerful voice for girls' education. She has faced violence, hatred, and criticism simply for advocating for girls' education," said Hadia Sajid, a 22-year-old media student who attended Yousafzai's closing speech in Islamabad.

"It's disheartening that things remain largely unchanged since she left, but there has been marginal improvement, largely due to the impact of social media -- it's more difficult to hold back girls from their rights."

Yousafzai founded the Malala Fund with her father, once a teacher in the Swat Valley who pushed against societal norms to champion his daughter's education.

The charity has invested millions of dollars in tackling the plight of 120 million girls out of school across the world.

"Pakistan is where I began my journey and where my heart will always be," Yousafzai said in her speech on Sunday.

But in her native country the projects she backs in rural areas are rarely publicised.

"I still think Malala is a paradox in Pakistan," said Dad.

"While her global achievements are undeniable, officials and the public remain divided, caught between admiration and mistrust. Yet Malala's impact transcends these perceptions," Dad told AFP.

T.Sasaki--JT