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Malala Yousafzai's appeal to the international community to speak out for Afghan women


 
United Nations: Pakistan's Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai has called on the international community to work together to allow Afghan girls to go to school and their teachers to work.

According to the report, Malala Yousafzai, the youngest Nobel laureate ever, told the UN Security Council on Thursday afternoon how a change of government in Afghanistan could affect the country's women and girls.

Describing his experience of surviving a shooting on a Swat road, he said that 15 years ago, in his childhood, he used to flog people, close schools for girls and go to shopping malls. Banners were put up to keep women away.

"This is a story that if we don't act now, many Afghan girls will be seen telling it," she said.

He called on the council to send a clear message to the Taliban that maintaining the rights of women and girls is a condition of any kind of working relationship.

Her remarks came as media reports in recent days said the Taliban, who returned to power in Kabul 20 months later last month, were once again restricting girls' access to education and forcing them to go home. I am being forced to live.

Malala Yousafzai told the Security Council: "I called for the right of every girl to go to school. I saw a gunman stop my school bus, take my name and shoot me. I was 15 at the time. When I was a year old, I saw that my house had changed from peaceful to full of fear in just three years.

Malala, who was shot dead by a Taliban gunman on her way home from school in 2012, urged the council to recognize girls' education as a "powerful weapon for peace and security and to protect Afghan women and girls." To protect.

Malala is heading a multibillion-dollar fund to promote girls' education around the world.

"Afghan women are demanding the right to choose their future, their protests in Kabul are being thwarted by tear gas and other means," she said.

She said she has worked with many Afghan women teachers and lawyers who have rebuilt the education system over the past two decades.

"Because of their efforts, 39 percent of the students who went to school in Afghanistan last year were girls. Now their development and the future of these girls are in jeopardy," she said.

Malala Yousafzai said she had learned from Afghans that girls' secondary schools were being closed in some places and teachers and students were being asked to stay at home, while many female teachers were told they had No more jobs.

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