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Thursday, July 18, 2013

A Taliban Malala replicates that was shot for making 'Propaganda' pro-US

A Taliban leader has sent a letter to a media to answer the speech that the young Pakistani Malala Yousafzai did last week at the United Nations headquarters, after recovering from the serious injuries to his head and neck to be gunned down in October 2012 by a member of the Taliban in Pakistan. The insurgency, which is identified with the name of Adnan Rasheed , clarified that the letter does not state the opinion of the fundamentalist movement, but his own, but explains as to why the Taliban opened fire Malala. He says it was the reason for going to school, as initially thought, 'but by doing propaganda against the Taliban and in favor of the United States. "There were thousands of girls who went to school and university before and after the Taliban came to Swat," the Taliban leader, referring to Pakistani valley where Malala lived and was attacked in the northwest of the country. "How would you explain that you were the only one that was on your list of goals? " he adds. Malala was unveiled writing a blog for the BBC, which recounted how life was in the Swat Valley under Taliban rule, especially for girls and women.The fundamentalist movement was strong in that area, and forced the closure of schools for girls and women. From that blog, the girl made ​​his name as a defender of the rights of girls and women , even though the texts were published under pseudonyms. In the letter the Taliban leader also makes direct reference to the speech made ​​in Malala UN headquarters on 12 July. "You said a teacher, a pencil and a book can change the world. I agree, but what kind of teacher, what kind of pencil and what kind of book? " , interrogates the insurgent with insight, and presented to the young as a naive or floating with purely pro-Western mentality. In that sense, the Taliban leader leaves no stone cold and fall hard against the United Nations. "The place where you got up to speak in favor of justice and equality, is a place where all nations are equal. wicked Only five states have veto power, and the rest are powerless", highlights the Taliban reference to the UN, and in particular to the five countries of the Security Council. The letter, of more than three and a half pages , not wasted. In it, the Taliban also ensures that, despite everything, deeply regretted that Malala was injured and would have liked to warn before the attack that he was getting in over my head.

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