Malala Yousafzai condemns Donald Trump's call to ban Muslims from entering US
Culled from BBC
Malala Yousafzai has condemned a call by US presidential hopeful Donald Trump to ban Muslims from entering the US.
The
Nobel Prize winner said his comments were "full of hatred" and blaming
Muslims for terrorism would only "radicalise more terrorists".
She
was speaking at an event to mark one year since a Taliban attack on a
school in Peshawar, Pakistan left more than 150 dead, most of them
children.
In 2012, Malala was herself shot in the head by the Taliban.
Schools and colleges in some provinces in Pakistan are closed today to mark the one year anniversary.
Pakistan's
president, prime minister and chief of army are among several top
leaders who will attend a commemoration ceremony at the Army Public
School, where the massacre happened, later today
Mr Trump had called for a halt to Muslims entering the US until authorities could "figure out" Muslim attitudes to the country, in the aftermath of the San Bernardino shootings.
His comments drew widespread criticism in the US including from fellow Republicans.
Speaking at the event in Birmingham on Tuesday, Malala told AFP news
agency: "Well, that's really tragic that you hear these comments which
are full of hatred, full of this ideology of being discriminative
towards others."
The 18-year-old Pakistani campaigner was also
quoted by the Press Association as saying that such comments could
"radicalise more terrorists" and urged politicians and the media to
exercise more caution.
"If your intention is to stop terrorism, do
not try to blame the whole population of Muslims for it because it
cannot stop terrorists," she said.
Malala also reiterated her call for quality education around the
world to "defeat the mindset of terrorism mentality and of hatred" that
led to events such as the Peshawar attack.
She was shot in the head by the Taliban for campaigning for girls' rights to an education.
Other speakers at the event included survivors of the attack,
including a 16-year-old who lost his younger brother, and a 13-year-old
who was paralysed from the waist down from gunshot wounds.
The
BBC's Shaimaa Khalil in Peshawar says it has been a difficult year for
the city, with security increased significantly and parents still
worried about the possibility of a similar attack.



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