Malala stable in UK hospital as support floods in

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The 14-year-old Pakistani girl shot in the head by the Taliban was in a stable condition in a British hospital Tuesday as well-wishers from around the world left her messages of support.
Malala Yousafzai “remains stable”, according to doctors monitoring her at the specialist Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, central England, which treats British soldiers wounded in Afghanistan.
“She spent a second comfortable night at the hospital and continues to be cared for,” the hospital said.
Malala 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.
She came to prominence with a blog for the BBC highlighting atrocities under the Taliban, the hardline Islamists who terrorised the Swat valley from 2007 until an army offensive in 2009.
The teenager had a bullet removed from her skull during an operation in Pakistan last week.
Donations towards her care, which is being funded by the Pakistani government, are being received by the Queen Elizabeth Hospital’s charity while hundreds of people have left messages of support on the hospital’s website. The well-wishers are from countries including Pakistan, Britain, India, the United States, Canada, Brazil, Myanmar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, New Zealand, Rwanda and the Netherlands.
“We the Pakistanis are so sorry that a little girl like you had to stand up for all of us. If we had shown some courage you would have been safe and healthy today. Malala, get well please, we need you,” wrote Durre Nayab. “Please accept my and my family’s gratitude for what you have stood for. You are a true daughter of Pakistan. We are in your debt forever. Get well soon,” said Munir Pervaiz.
Ajmal Khan wrote: “You are the one who stood for a cause that you believed in and we salute your courage and your committment toward your cherished goal.
“I personally was in tears when I heard of your ordeal. But hopefully you will get well soon and start your mission again with the same spirit and agility.”
A message book has also been opened at Council House, the headquarters of Birmingham’s local authority.
Birmingham has a 100,000-strong ethnic Pakistani community — a tenth of the city’s population.
Cards, letters and gifts to Malala are being handled by the city’s Pakistani consulate.

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