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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Malala Yousafzai in Pakistan for 1st time since she was shot

In this Feb. 4, 2016, file photo, Nobel Peace Prize-winner Malala Yousafzai, from Pakistan, speaks during the first focus event on education at the "Supporting Syria and the Region" conference at the Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre in London. Yousafzai has returned to Pakistan for the first time she was shot in 2012 by militants angered at her championing of education for girls. (Matt Dunham / Associated Press)
By Munir Ahmed Associated Press

ISLAMABAD – Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai returned to Pakistan early Thursday for the first time since she was shot in 2012 by Taliban militants angered at her championing of education for girls.

Tight security greeted the now-20-year-old university student upon her arrival at Pakistan’s Benazir Bhutto International Airport. Local television showed her with her parents in the lounge at the airport before leaving in a convoy of nearly 15 vehicles, many of them occupied by heavily armed police.

She is to meet with Pakistan’s prime minister later in the day. Her return to Pakistan has been shrouded in secrecy and it wasn’t immediately clear how long she would be in Islamabad or whether she planned to travel to her hometown of Swat where the shooting occurred.

Yousafzai was just 14 but already known for her activism when Taliban gunman boarded the school van in which she was sitting and demanded to know “who is Malala?” before shooting her in the head. Two of her classmates were also injured. In critical condition, Yousafzai was flown to the garrison city of Rawalpindi before being airlifted to Birmingham in Britain.

She has spoken at the United Nations, mesmerizing the world with her eloquence and her unrelenting commitment to the promotion of girl’s education through the Malala Fund, a book, meetings with refugees, and other activism.

She was awarded the Nobel in 2014, along with Indian child-rights activist Kailash Satyarthi, and said on the day she collected the Nobel that “Education is one of the blessings of life, and one of its necessities.”

She remained in Britain after undergoing medical treatment there and was accepted to the University of Oxford last year.

But at home in Pakistan, she has been condemned by some as a Western mouthpiece with some even suggesting on social media that the shooting was staged. Yousafzai has repeatedly responded to the criticism with a grace far outstripping her years, often saying education is neither Western, nor Eastern.

Often when she has spoken in public she has championed her home country and spoken in her native Pashto language, always promising to return to her home.

On March 23, when Pakistan celebrated Pakistan Day, Yousafzai tweeted, “I cherish fond memories of home, of playing cricket on rooftops and singing the national anthem in school. Happy Pakistan Day!”

Local television channels have been showing her return to Pakistan with some replaying the horror of her shooting and the rush to get her treatment.