Pakistan girl shot by Taliban stands up for first time

Daily News Egypt
1 Min Read
AFP
AFP

Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani schoolgirl shot in the head by the Taliban, has been able to stand with help for the first time, doctors treating her at a British hospital said Friday.

She is also communicating by writing notes, said Doctor Dave Rosser, the medical director at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, central England, where the teenager was taken to from Pakistan on Monday.

She was shot on a school bus in the former Taliban stronghold of the Swat valley last week as a punishment for campaigning for the right of girls to an education, in an attack which outraged the world.

“Malala Yousufzai’s condition this morning is comfortable and stable,” the hospital said in a statement.

“Malala’s family remain in Pakistan at this time,” it added.

ITV television reported that the hospital was trying to arrange for her to listen to her father on the telephone, though she is currently unable to talk.

“We know there was some damage to the brain, certainly no physical, no deficit in terms of function,” it quoted a spokesman as saying.

A hospital spokeswoman told AFP Malala was 15, not 14 as previously stated.

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