Las Vegas Review-Journal

Two Pakistanis get life in prison, eight acquitted, in attack on teen activist

- By GREG BOTELHO and ALIZA KASSIM

A Pakistani court has sentenced two people to life in prison and acquitted eight others for the 2012 attack on future Nobel Peace Prize-winning activist Malala Yousafzai, police said Friday.

Media reports from late April, including one from CNN citing Pakistani antiterror­ism judge Mohammad Amin Kundi, indicated all 10 people arrested in the case had been convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

But authoritie­s now say that was not the case.

Rather, an antiterror­ism court concluded “not enough evidence was produced” to convict eight individual­s charged in the case, “whereas proof was provided (for) the two convicted,” according to Saleem Khan Marwat — a police officer in the Pakistani district of Swat whose office got a copy of the verdict.

Azam Kham, a police deputy inspector general in Pakistan’s Malakand region that includes Swat, confirmed the court’s decision, including that there wasn’t sufficient evidence to convict those acquitted. This suggests the eight conviction­s and sentences were not overturned but, instead, never happened in the first place.

There was no explanatio­n for the discrepanc­y in the informatio­n provided by Kundi and the new details on the eight acquittals, which apparently also occurred in late April but were not revealed until Friday.

That said, just because eight of those accused in Yousafzai’s shooting were acquitted does not mean they’ve walked free. They’re still being held by Pakistani authoritie­s for other alleged crimes, according to Marwat.

The court proceeding­s mark the latest in the roller coaster saga surroundin­g Yousafzai, who evolved in a few short years from anonymous child advocate to Taliban target to global symbol in the fight for women and children’s rights.

Born in the Swat city of Mingora, Yousafzai persistent­ly attended school there despite the growing threat of fundamenta­lists opposed to girls getting an education. Not only that, she blogged for the BBC about the dangers of living in the area and the importance of girls going to school.

She was 15 when a gunman boarded her bus as it headed home from school and shot her in the head and neck. The bus driver hit the gas, and the assailants got away.

Yousafzai was eventually flown to England for intensive medical treatment. She not only survived but thrived, stepping up her activism and earning the Nobel Peace Prize — which she shared with India’s Kailash Satyarthi — last year.

Last September, Pakistani army spokesmanM­aj. Gen. Asim Bajwa announced that 10 were arrested in Swat for the shooting.

CNN

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