ISLAMABAD (AP) — The United Arab Emirates plans to send a specialized aircraft to serve as an ambulance for a 14-year-old Pakistani girl shot by the Taliban in case doctors decide to send her abroad for treatment, a Pakistani official said Sunday.
The
shooting of Malala Yousufzai along with two classmates while they were
on their way home from school on Oct. 9 horrified people in Pakistan and internationally. She was shot for promoting girl's education and criticizing the Taliban.
The attack left Yousufzai seriously wounded and sparked calls for the Pakistani government to step up its fight against the militant group.
Visas are being finalized for the air ambulance crew and six doctors
who will accompany the flight, Islamabad's Ambassador to the UAE Jamil
Ahmed Khan told Pakistan's Geo TV on Sunday. Arrangements have been made
to treat the girl at three hospitals in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, he said.
The UAE Embassy in Islamabad could not immediately be reached for comment.No decision has yet been taken to send the girl abroad, but the air ambulance is part of the contingency plan, the Pakistani military said Sunday. Yousufzai is being treated in a military hospital, where doctors removed a bullet from her neck. The bullet went into her head before travelling toward her spine.
Doctors reviewed the girl's condition Sunday and are satisfied she is making slow and steady progress, the military said. They will carry out another detailed review Sunday evening.
On Saturday, the military said Yousufzai remained on a ventilator but was able to move her legs and hands after her sedatives were reduced.
Yousufzai earned the enmity of the Taliban for publicizing their behavior when they took over the northwestern Swat Valley where she lived and for speaking about the importance of education for girls.
The group first started to exert its influence in Swat in 2007 and quickly extended its reach to much of the valley by the next year. They set about imposing their will on residents by forcing men to grow beards, preventing women from going to the market and blowing up many schools — the majority for girls.
Yousufzai wrote about these practices in a journal for the BBC under a pseudonym when she was just 11. After the Taliban were pushed out of the valley in 2009 by the Pakistani military, she became even more outspoken in advocating for girls' education. She appeared frequently in the media and was given one of the country's highest honors for civilians for her bravery.
The Pakistani Taliban
said they carried out the shooting because Yousufzai was promoting
"Western thinking." They said it was ordered by the leader of the
Taliban movement in Swat, Maulana Fazlullah, and his deputies, who are
all believed to have fled to Afghanistan after the military invaded in 2009.
Police
have arrested at least three suspects in connection with the attack,
but the two gunmen who carried out the shooting remain at large.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai
has written letters to top political and religious leaders in Pakistan
denouncing the attack on Yousufzai and asking them to help battle
extremism in both countries, the president's office said in a statement
issued late Saturday. Karzai wrote that he views the shooting as an
attack on Afghanistan's girls as well.
"It is a deplorable event that requires serious attention," Karzai wrote.
Those
upset about the shooting should not be silenced, he wrote, and both
Afghans and Pakistanis need to cooperate and fight with strong resolve
against terrorism and extremism so that the "children of Afghanistan and
Pakistan" can be saved from oppression.
Karzai
has been pushing Islamabad to take more action against militant groups
that he says hide out in Pakistan and then cross into Afghanistan to conduct attacks on Afghan officials and security forces and on international forces.
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Associated Press writer Deb Riechmann contributed to this report from Kabul, Afghanistan.
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