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Shot Pakistani girl responding well. to treatment

Maggot

"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood"
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Full Member
Minuteman
  • Jul 27, 2007
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    <span style="color: #CC0000"> I hope she lives to spit in the faces and then on the graves of the Taliban who shot her. </span>



    BIRMINGHAM, England (AP) — A teenage Pakistani girl shot in the head by the Taliban for promoting girls’ education has responded well to treatment and impressed doctors with her strength, the British hospital where she was being treated said Tuesday.


    Experts are optimistic that 14-year-old Malala Yousufzai, who was airlifted Monday to Britain to receive specialized medical care, has a good chance of recovery because unlike adults, the brains of teenagers are still growing and can adapt to trauma better.


    ‘‘Her response to treatment so far indicated that she could make a good recovery from her injuries,’’ the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in central England’s Birmingham said in a statement.


    Despite the early optimism, the full extent of Malala’s brain injuries has not been made public and outside experts cautioned it is extremely unlikely that a full recovery of all her brain’s functions can be made. Instead, they could only hope that the bullet took a ‘‘lucky path’’ — going through a more ‘‘silent,’’ or less active — part of the brain.


    ‘‘You don’t have a bullet go through your brain and have a full recovery,’’ said Dr. Jonathan Fellus, chief scientific officer at the New Jersey-based International Brain Research Foundation.


    Malala was returning home from school in Pakistan last week when she was targeted by the Taliban for promoting girls’ education and criticizing the militant group’s behavior when they took over the scenic Swat Valley where she lived. Two of her classmates were also wounded in the attack and are receiving treatment in Pakistan.


    She arrived Monday in Britain, where she can be protected from follow-up attacks threatened by the militants. The Taliban have threatened to target Malala again because she promotes ‘‘Western thinking.’’


    There was some concern for the teenager’s safety Tuesday when police stopped and questioned two people who tried to visit Malala, but hospital officials and police stressed there was no threat to the girl’s safety. The two people, who claimed to be Malala’s relatives, were turned away.


    ‘‘We think it’s probably people being over-curious,’’ hospital spokesman Dr. Dave Rosser said.


    Pakistani doctors at a military hospital earlier removed a bullet from Malala’s body that entered her head and headed toward her spine. The military has said she was able to move her legs and hands several days ago when her sedatives were reduced. They have not said whether she suffered any brain damage or other permanent damage.


    On Monday, the military said damaged bones in Malala’s skull will need to be repaired or replaced, and she will need ‘‘intensive neuro rehabilitation.’’ The decision to send the girl abroad was taken in consultation with her family, and the Pakistani government will pay for her treatment.


    Doctors say Malala has an advantage because teens are generally healthier and their bodies have a stronger ability to react to the disruption that the injury causes.


    ‘‘It helps to be young and resilient to weather that storm,’’ Fellus, at the International Brain Research Foundation, said. ‘‘Because her brain is continuing to develop at that age, she may have more flexibility in the brain.’’


    There’s also a psychological aspect to why youngsters have a better shot at recovery. While injured adults often mourn the loss of what they had, teens don’t know what they are missing.


    ‘‘They have an amazing capacity for hope,’’ Fellus said. In Malala’s case, her strong personality would also help her recover, he added.


    Still, experts cautioned that it is impossible to say how Malala will do without knowing the path of the bullet and what damages it caused, details that have not been released.


    ‘‘The brain is like real estate,’’ said Dr. Anders Cohen, chief of neurosurgery at The Brooklyn Hospital Center in New York. ‘‘Location is everything.


    ‘‘Based on the information we have, it appears that Malala was shot from the front down diagonally, but we don’t know what part of the brain the bullet went through, whether it crossed the midline and hit any vessels, or whether the bullet passed through the right or left side of the brain.’’


    The attack on the girls horrified people in Pakistan and across the world. Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari said Malala had become ‘‘a symbol of all that is good in us.’’


    ‘‘The work she did is far higher before God than that which is being done by terrorists in the name of religion,’’ he said at the Economic Cooperation Organization Summit in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan. ‘‘We will continue her bright work.’’Continued
     
    Re: Shot Pakistani girl responding well. to treatment

    <div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: maggot</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> <span style="color: #CC0000"> I hope she lives to spit in the faces and then on the graves of the Taliban who shot her. </span> </div></div>

    Amen and AMEN!!
     
    Re: Shot Pakistani girl responding well. to treatment

    <span style="color: #CC0000">Apparently these ass wipes are upset because theyre not getting to tell "Their side of the story." </span> Unfuckingbelievable.

    Demands Unbiased Coverage …
    Pakistan's Taliban insurgency faces a spate of bad press in mainstream Pakistani outlets related to the jihadists' failed assassination attempt of Malala Yousafzai, a young blogger who dared protest the Taliban's ban on educating girls. Now the Taliban are plotting terror strikes on TV stations and other media organizations, but local newspapers refuse to stay silent.

    The first report of these plots were surfaced by an urdu-language reporter on Saturday, who uncovered a special directive by the chief of the banned Tahreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Hakimullah Mehsud. As local newspaper Dawn reported, "Mehsud directed his subordinate to target the offices of media organisations in Karachi, Lahore, Rawalpindi, Islamabad and in other cities of the country especially those media organisations and media personalities who were denouncing TTP after attack on child activist Malala Yousufzai." In response, the Interior Ministry has beefed up security near media organizations. But the Taliban are still whining.

    Yesterday, local paper The News International gave voice to the Taliban's pathetic complaints of bias, which offered a rare window into terrorist media criticism. TTP spokesman Ihsanullah Ihsan said his group would "continue to respect journalists" except for highly biased outlets. The spokesman for another Taliban insurgent group, Sirajuddin Ahmad of Maulana Fazlullah, spoke at greater length:

    He said media provided an opportunity to all those people who were opposed to the Taliban and their activities and used insulting language against them on media. “Right from UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to Hillary Clinton and President Obama, all of them used whatever bad language and words they could use on the media but when we tried to reply to them, no media organisation was willing to give us importance. The media is not even allowed to use the real name for Maulana Fazlullah but calling him derogatory names like Mulla Radio,” Sirajuddin complained, but refused to admit that they planned attacks on the media.

    Wow, Columbia Journalism Review, here we come. Clearly Pakistani reporters should be giving equal weight to the pros and cons of shooting children in the face.

    The Taliban is mad because the rest of Pakistan is mad at them over the shooting. "Undoubtedly this is the worst press the TTP has ever had, there is no doubt," Rana Jawad, Islamabad bureau chief of Geo News, told The Guardian's Islamabad correspondent Jon Boone. The Taliban have been furious that justification for the attack, that the girl was being "un-Islamic," was not being placed prominently in news stories. Muhammad Amir Rana of the Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies, says the Taliban are taking a PR beating. "We have seen a similar public sentiment in the past, but this time it is quite unique," he said. "This case has provided a catharsis of the masses for all the grievances that have been building up for years."

    Apparently, the insurgent groups just aren't very media savvy, according to Mullah Yahya, a former high-ranking Afghan Information Ministry official, who spoke with The Daily Beast's Sami Yousafzai. “First of all, attempting to kill a 14-year-old girl is a low act,” he said. “Second, claiming responsibility for it is a sign that the [Pakistani] Taliban are not aware of the media’s importance. I have seen more anger against the religious elements in the past week than in all my 40 years of life.” So here's to you, Pakistani press. You've defied the all-too-common media trap of false equivalence.
     
    Re: Shot Pakistani girl responding well. to treatment

    This kind of audacity the Taliban displays in this incident is what happens when your global strategy is to try to fight a few footsoldiers instead of the worldwide ideology that compels them.

    We are about to lose the first stage of war with these savages because we absolutely refuse to acknowledge what we are really fighting, how big that fight really is going to be, and how long it is really going to last. That caused us to jump in before we even considered what we were getting into.

    One day we will look back at this time period and see how arrogant and naive we really were concerning Islamic jihad.

    There is a reason the term "moderate Nazi" is not in our lexicon.
    National socialism has little impact on world affairs now.
    Those two facts are closely related. We didn't give the ideology a pass, or tolerate it, we defeated it when we decided it was time to intervene.

    I mentioned this brave young girl in the Constitutional Literacy class I teach to high school age kids, holding her up as an example of the kind of guts it takes to change things, the sacrifice it often requires to change things, and the outsized impact even one motivated and courageous little girl can have on the world. I truly hope she lives to see the day her dreams are realized.

    When there are hundreds of thousands of people like her in these Islamic tyrannies willing to go all in to change things, the problem will be taken care of indigenously, in the same manner we did in 1776.

    However, until we as a nation are ready to really fight, I don't believe a single drop of US blood nor an dime of national treasure should continue to be allocated to a fight we do not have the will to win or the moral courage to see clearly.

    My best hopes for a speedy recovery and a more free existence for this little girl. She deserves much better.