The Pakistani teenager who was shot by the Taliban for promoting girls’ education has urged her country to reverse a decision to rename a college in her honour to avert militant attacks on students.
Malala Yousufzai (15), who became a symbol of youth resistance to the Taliban, made the request after students broke into the school, tore down her pictures and boycotted classes in her home town of Mingora.
They said renaming the college was endangering their lives.
Senior government official Kamran Rehman said Malala called him from London, where she is being treated for critical wounds from the attack on October 9th.
The Taliban said it targeted her for promoting education for secular girls.
Malala’s case won worldwide recognition for the struggle for women’s rights in Pakistan. The Taliban has vowed to target her again.
Pakistani Taliban have a strong presence in the country’s tribal regions bordering Afghanistan.
A bomb today ripped through the office of local militant commander Maulvi Abbas in Wana, a town in the South Waziristan tribal region in the northwest, killing him and three of his guards, two intelligence officials said.
Abbas was an associate of Hakimullah Mehsud, head of theTehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan militant group. It was unclear who planted the bomb.
The attack came weeks after a suicide bomber in the same town attacked Maulvi Nazir, a prominent militant commander who is believed to have a non-aggression pact with the army.
Nazir was wounded in the attack, and seven of his men were killed.
Since then there has been tension between followers of Nazir and the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan in the region.
AP