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Islamabad: Pakistan's peace campaigner Malala Yousufzai, who was shot at by the Taliban, will not be sent abroad for treatment, said Interior Minister Rehman Malik. He added that her attackers have been identified. Malik said he was satisfied with her treatment by Pakistani doctors, reported Geo News from Peshawar. The interior minister said Malala's attackers had been identified and would be brought to justice.
Malala was shot and seriously injured in the country's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on Tuesday when she was returning from home from school. Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack that has sparked outrage across the world. Malik said doctors are satisfied that she is now out of danger. The minister added that neurosurgeons from London and the US were ready and would be called to Pakistan if the need arose. Doctors at the Combined Military Hospital (CMH) removed a bullet that pierced her head and got lodged in her shoulder.
Pakistani authorities on Wednesday had announced a reward of Rs 1 crore for information leading to the capture of the militants who attempted to assassinate
teenaged rights activist Malala Yousufzai, who was shot and seriously injured in the former Taliban stronghold of Swat. The Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa government will give a reward of Rs 1 crore to anyone who helps identify the persons who attacked Malala on Tuesday, provincial Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain told a news conference in Peshawar this evening. The name of any person who provides such information will be kept secret, Hussain said. "The blood of Malala and the sympathy extended to her by people from around the world is a slap on the face of terrorism," he said.
Federal Interior Minister Rehman Malik told reporters after visiting Malala in a military hospital in Peshawar that authorities had identified the attackers who shot the 14-year-old schoolgirl and they would be brought to justice. He did not give any details about the attackers but claimed they had come from the Afghan province of Kunar to Swat to target Malala.
In a related development, police and security agencies detained over 200 people, including a security guard and a driver of Malala's school, in connection with the attack, officials told the media. Authorities also registered a case under the Anti-Terrorism Act. The banned Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan claimed responsibility for the attempted assassination, saying Malala was targeted for espousing "pro-West" views and backing a "secular government" in Swat, which was a stronghold of the militants till early 2009.
Both Hussain and Malik said Malala's condition had improved after doctors performed a three-hour surgery to remove a bullet that had lodged near her spine. They said doctors had concluded that there was no immediate need to send Malala abroad for treatment.
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