Anti-Taliban men killed in Pakistan's Swat

Campaign of targeted killings of peace committee members resumes following 
attack on student activist Malala Yousufzai.
Last Modified: 26 Oct 2012 12:45


Gunmen have shot dead two members of an anti-Taliban peace committee in 
northwestern Pakistan's Swat Valley, where Taliban fighters earlier attempted 
to kill teenage rights activist Malala Yousufzai, police have told Al Jazeera.

The shootings on Thursday night have heightened fears that a campaign of 
targeted killings against anti-Taliban leaders is continuing, despite the 
government having said it has tightened security in the valley following the 
attack on Yousufzai on October 9.

The latest incidents took place in the Charbagh area, about 10km north of 
Mingora, the valley's main town.

Police said gunmen opened fire on Tajim Gul late on Thursday night in front of 
a mosque, while Sardar Mohammad was gunned down at his home.

"They were fired upon by unidentified men. We are trying to find them, but so 
far have not made any serious headway," Aleem Madad, an official at the 
Charbagh police station, told Al Jazeera.

"In both incidents the attackers managed to flee. We have registered a case 
against the unknown attackers," Liaqat Ali, another police official, told the 
AFP news agency.

Mohammad's five-year-old son was injured in the shooting.

Residents said both victims were members of local peace committee and they 
blamed the Taliban for the killing.

Malala, who won international recognition for a blog about the life as a 
schoolgirl under the Taliban and a campaign for the right to an education, is 
one of the more high-profile targets that the Taliban have attacked in Swat in 
recent years.

The army declared Swat, once known as the "Switzerland of Pakistan", back under 
control in July 2009, after defeating radical cleric Maulana Fazlullah and his 
Taliban fighters who waged a two-year campaign of terror in the district.

Malala 'to return'

On Friday, Malala's father told media at the hospital where she is now being 
treated in the UK that his daughter's condition was "improving with encouraing 
speed".

"It's a miracle for us. She was in a very bad condition," Ziauddin Yousufzai 
said, after arriving in Birmingham on Thursday along with other family members.

In previous comments, Yousufzai vowed that Malala would return home after 
finishing medical treatment at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Britain's second 
city, despite new threats against her.

Malala, shot for advocating girls' education in her native Swat Valley, was 
airlifted to Britain on October 15 for specialist treatment from the Pakistani 
city of Rawalpindi. Doctors in Birmingham said on Friday that she was 
comfortable and responding well to treatment.

Before his departure for the UK, Yousufzai spoke to Pakistani state television, 
marking the first time he had spoken publicly since the shooting.

"I first laughed at it because all of our sacrifices, my personal [sacrifices], 
or this attack on my daughter, cannot have such a cheap purpose that we would 
go to some other country and live the rest of our life there," Yousufzai said, 
speaking in Urdu.

Since she was shot on October 9, Malala has become a hero both at home and 
internationally, although her work in speaking out against Taliban atrocities 
has long been respected and known beyond her home town.

Blog for BBC

At the age of 11, Malala began writing a blog under a pseudonym for the BBC 
about life under the Taliban in Swat. After the military ousted Taliban 
fighters in 2009, she began publicly speaking out about the need for girls' 
education.

She appeared frequently in the media and was given one of the country's highest 
civilian honours for her bravery.

A Taliban gunman shot her in the neck and head as she was on a school bus on 
her way home from school in Swat's city of Mingora. Two other girls were 
injured in the attack.

The Taliban have vowed to kill her, raising questions about whether it would be 
safe for her to return but her father dispelled reports the family might seek 
asylum abroad.

The Taliban said they targeted Malala because she promotes "Western thinking", 
and have vowed to finish the job in the future.

Malala's father spoke alongside Interior Minister Rehman Malik at the 
minister's Islamabad office. Malik promised that the government would protect 
Malala and her family when they return.

Malik said Malala had asked her father to bring some of her school books with 
him on his way to Britain.

"Even while sitting there she is taking care of her schooling," said Malik.
Source:
Al Jazeera And Agencies




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