The 16 December Peshawar school attack was the deadliest of its kind in Pakistan’s history. Pakistan, a protector, incubator and financier of terrorism lost 145 of its citizens, 132 of them children, in a mere 15 minutes of carnage perpetrated by the Pakistani Taliban (TTP). Malala Yousafzai, the Nobel Laureate who survived a TTP assassination attempt, condemned the attack as “atrocious and cowardly”.
Amidst the many Pakistani public figures currently denouncing terrorism in their nation, she may be the only one wielding true moral authority and the hope required to lead an awakening of mass proportions.
We invite our users to read the complete article published December 22 2014
The 16 December Peshawar school attack was the deadliest of its kind in Pakistan’s history. Pakistan, a protector, incubator and financier of terrorism lost 145 of its citizens, 132 of them children, in a mere 15 minutes of carnage perpetrated by the Pakistani Taliban (TTP). Malala Yousafzai, the Nobel Laureate who survived a TTP assassination attempt, condemned the attack as “atrocious and cowardly”.
Amidst the many Pakistani public figures currently denouncing terrorism in their nation, she may be the only one wielding true moral authority and the hope required to lead an awakening of mass proportions.
We invite our users to read the complete article published December 22 2014