Malala returns to Pakistan for first time since shooting

Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai has returned to Pakistan for the first time since being shot by Taliban militants.
Ms Yousafzai, now aged 20 and a vocal human rights activist, was shot in the head by a gunman for campaigning for female education in 2012.
In an emotional speech at the prime minister’s office, she said it had been her dream to return “without any fear”.
Details of the surprise trip are being kept secret for security reasons.
Pakistani television broadcast video showing her arriving with her parents at Islamabad’s Benazir Bhutto International Airport under tight security.
“Always it has been my dream that I should go to Pakistan and there, in peace and without any fear, I can move on streets, I can meet people, I can talk to people,” Ms Yousafzai said in a televised address from the PM’s house in Islamabad.
“And I think that it’s my old home again… so it is actually happening, and I am grateful to all of you.”
The trip is expected to last four days. Officials from her Malala Fund group are travelling with her, local media report.
It has not been confirmed if she will visit her family’s home region of Swat in the country’s rural north-west – once a militant stronghold – during her visit.
Many on Twitter called for a warm welcome for the activist after news of her overnight homecoming broke.

 

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