http://www.dailychilli.com/news/7015-poster-girl-of-taliban-terror-gets-new-nose

Poster girl of Taliban terror gets new nose 

A young Afghan girl, who went on to become a poster girl of Taliban oppression 
in Afghanistan after her nose was sliced off by her militant husband, has 
unveiled her new face to the world.

19-year-old Aisha triggered a worldwide outpouring of sympathy after her plight 
was highlighted by the Time magazine which put her on the front cover to draw 
attention to sufferings of women in Afghanistan.

The girl, thanks to pioneering surgery by American surgeons, got a new nose and 
appeared before the cameras to receive an Enduring Heart Award by a foundation 
which paid for her operation in Los Angeles, The Telegraph reported on 
Wednesday.

Aisha was 12 when her father married her to a Taliban fighter to repay a debt.

 
Aisha on the cover of TIME magazine before her surgery, left, and, right, after 
her prosthetic nose was fitted 

After she was handed over to the fighter`s family, she was abused and made to 
sleep in a stable with animals, and when she was caught trying to escape, her 
nose and ears were sliced off by her husband as punishment.

After being left for dead in the mountains, Aisha crawled to her grandfather's 
house from where she was rushed to an American medical facility.

"When they cut off my nose and ears, I passed out. In the middle of the night 
it felt like there was cold water in my nose. I opened my eyes and I couldn't 
even see because of all the blood," she revealed.

The Grossman Burn Foundation flew her to America in August where she had a 
prosthetic nose fitted at the West Hills hospital and the doctors say she would 
be given a "more permanent" solution soon.

This might involve rebuilding her nose and ears, using bone, tissue and 
cartilage from other parts of the body.

Till then, Aisha is back to her old joyful ways.

"This is an award given to a woman whose heart endures," said the Californian 
first lady Maria Shriver, wife of governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who presented 
the award to the Afghan girl who never thought she would see life again.

Despite the ordeal she had gone through, Aisha, whose surname has never been 
disclosed, was grateful to have a new life and face.

"Thank you so much," she said. Aisha`s case has been used in the West to 
illustrate the fear of what will happen if US, British and other international 
forces leave prematurely. 
Source: Agencies

Published Oct 14 2010


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