Si Malala itu ga disukai di tempat asalnya oleh orang Islam.

"Here in Swat, we have seen the hell that is Taliban rule. *And yet, some
people still say they would much rather side with the Taliban than Malala*.
Sometimes people never learn."

Ga beda dgn tetangga2 Malala yg lbh suka Taliban ketimbang Malala biarpun
udah tau Taliban itu kyk apa, orang2 Islam dan anjing2 buduk piaraan mereka
jg msh lbh suka Taliban ketimbang kafir.


Malala, shot by Taliban for insulting Islam, resented in her own
hometown<http://www.jihadwatch.org/2013/10/malala-shot-by-taliban-for-insulting-islam-resented-in-her-own-hometown.html>

The Taliban have said that they shot Malala not because she called for
education, but because she had, in their view, left Islam. Clearly, that
view resonates with many Pakistanis. She herself insists that the Taliban
do not represent Islam, and that what they do goes against its teachings --
so we see in her targeting and ostracizing what all too often happens to
those who try to present a vision of Islam that differs from that of
violent Islamic supremacists.

"Malala, survivor of Taliban, resented in Pakistan hometown," by Mehreen
Zahra-Malik for
Reuters<http://news.yahoo.com/malala-survivor-taliban-resented-pakistan-hometown-092329348.html>,
October 11:

MINGORA, Pakistan (Reuters) - *For many of her compatriots, Malala
Yousafzai is a stooge of the United States and a CIA agent, a symbol of the
West's evils and a global conspiracy to bring down her native Pakistan. *She
has won the European Union's prestigious human rights award and was one of
the favorites to win the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday, but in her native
Swat valley, friends and neighbors reacted with a mixture of resentment,
fear and jealousy.

*"Malala is spoiling Pakistan's name around the world," said Mohammad
Rizwan, a shop owner in her hometown of Mingora. "We didn't need Malala to
come and tell us how important education is."*

Around the corner from his shop is the quiet street where Malala, 16, was
shot a year ago after trying to defy the Taliban with her outspoken views
on women's right to education.

She survived after being airlifted to Britain for treatment and has since
become a symbol of defiance against militants holed up in nearby tribal
areas on the Afghan border.

But in this deeply conservative part of Pakistan, where women are expected
to stay at home and keep their views to themselves, many people view
Malala's campaign with suspicion.

For Reuters, you're conservative if you support Sharia restrictions on the
education and rights of women, and conservative if you oppose those
restrictions as well.

In a nation thriving on conspiracy theories, some have even doubted the
sincerity of her campaign, claiming it is part of her family's ploy to move
to Britain or that she is just an attention seeker.

Social media sites are brimming with insulting messages. "*We hate Malala
Yousafzai, a CIA agent*," says one Facebook page.

*"Here, people have been unkind to her. They want to forget her. They think
she is a drama queen. But what can you do?" said Ahmad Shah, a childhood
friend of Malala's father who helped write her speech at the United Nations
this year.
*
"Here in Swat, we have seen the hell that is Taliban rule. *And yet, some
people still say they would much rather side with the Taliban than Malala*.
Sometimes people never learn."

In an impoverished region where violence is part of daily life, some of
Malala's neighbors were simply afraid. Some appeared keen to forget about
her and move on.

The picturesque valley was overran by the Taliban, who imposed strict
Islamic laws and kept its people in fear, in 2007. It is now controlled by
the Pakistani army. Mingora, a dusty town of windy roads surrounded by
jagged hills, is festooned with billboards reading "Long live the Pakistan
Army!"

There were no posters of Malala.

"Malala is a talented girl, no doubt," said Zahid Khan, head of the Swat
Peace Jirga, an anti-Taliban body who has survived three attempts on his
life for his work.

"I have been attacked. Shot. Almost killed. But no one is honoring me. The
state hasn't given me a cent in compensation."

The Taliban have issued repeated threats to kill her.

"She says she does not want to live like an illiterate person in a walled
compound and deliver children," said Shahidullah Shahid, a Pakistani
Taliban spokesman.

"Her mother and grandmother used to live in walled compounds and deliver
children, so by saying that she didn't even spare her mother."

At Khushal Public School, a three-storey building where she studied, many
avoided mentioning her name altogether.

A red and yellow school bus parked outside its metal gate was the same as
the one in which Malala was shot on October 9, 2012. In her classroom, her
old seat was still empty. Someone had placed a schoolbag there to mark her
presence.

But there were no events held to mark the first anniversary of her shooting.

"We want the girls to forget the trauma of that day," said Nargis Bibi, a
school administrator. "We want them to forget it. We don't want them to
relive it again. We all want to move on."

Quratulain Ali, Malala's friend, said quietly: "*We are all very happy in
our hearts (that she was nominated to win the Nobel Peace Prize) but we
don't often speak about it openly. There could be danger for us also*."...

 Posted by Robert <http://www.jihadwatch.org/> on October 11, 2013 5:05 PM

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