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Malala: a replacement for Bilawal and Maryam

https://malala.org/newsroom/malala-and-ziauddin-yousafzai-visit-pakistan
Malala Fund co-founders Malala and Ziauddin Yousafzai spent the last two days in Pakistan meeting with leaders, educators and young women from flood-impacted communities in Sindh. Through this visit, they aimed to better understand girls’ experiences, refocus international attention on the growing humanitarian crisis and amplify calls for emergency aid.
Malala visited relief sites in Dadu and met with flood-affected women, girls and their families. They spoke with her about their experiences, challenges and asks of leaders. One young woman, 16-year-old Sohaila said: “I want to go to school, but there is so much water. If there was less water, I’d even go through it. Now we are hearing that the flood waters will stay for five months.” The flood has disrupted learning for nearly 3.5 million children. It also destroyed almost half the schools in the Sindh province — those still standing are now temporary shelters or response centres.
Malala and Ziauddin also met with Sindh government officials in Karachi to discuss the challenges facing education in hard-hit areas. She urged leaders in Sindh and across the country to focus on mitigating education loss in their response plans, including working to reinstate schools as learning centres and providing incentives for girls to return to school after the crisis.
Malala speaking with Sohaila. Credit: Amna Zuberi for Malala Fund

Malala speaking with Sohaila. Credit: Amna Zuberi for Malala Fund
Malala meeting with young women in Dadu. Credit: Amna Zuberi for Malala Fund

Malala meeting with young women in Dadu. Credit: Amna Zuberi for Malala Fund

Malala Fund is working for a world where every girl can learn and lead.
Malala Fund is calling for urgent global and regional action to ensure impacted students receive the support and resources they need to return to school. In addition to Malala Fund’s initial emergency relief grant, Malala Fund has committed up to $700,000 (PKR 154 Million) to organisations in Pakistan, an investment that includes direct funding to local partners and partnerships to support flood relief.
“The scale of the destruction is astounding and the psychosocial and economic impact on the lives of people, especially women and girls cannot be overstated,” said Malala. “Millions of Pakistanis are suffering the consequences of climate inaction. World leaders must step up, accelerate their response plans and mobilise funds needed to help Pakistan rebuild and support impacted populations.”
Ziauddin Yousafzai added: Pakistan had the second highest rate of out-of-school students with nearly 22 million children facing great barriers to education. Without urgent action to undo the devastation caused by these floods, the education of 12 million more children is at risk. Pakistan is my home — and I want to see every child able to access the education they deserve.”
Let her be. She may be good but any leader or politician who have no roots in public cannot succeed.
Let it be known.
That is why imran khan always succeed and bilawal and maryam fails.
They can be proped up by army and america. They may have the support of the media too. But still to manage jalsas they need local administration. As accepted by many in pmln.
Actually they have always relied on the support of powerful families and groups and mafias strengthening them. Rather then aligning with low and middle class people and fighting those mafias.

Let them install malala. What can she do? And she wont be our queen? How long would she rule? 3 years? 5 years? 10 years?but again she has to come by votes. She didnt have votes.
But even still she would be better then pmln and ppp. If she want western agenda she would come tell the people it and try to implement it.
Not like nawaz sherif who want to declare line of control as permanent border but was too coward to accept in public. Come tell public this is your kashmir policy and friendship with india. If people give you mendate then do it. But come clean and open in public. Don't be a hypocrite where you claim to have been fighting for kashmir cause but internally stops your ambassador to even meets kashmiri leaders.

Pakistanis here your doubts are baseless. Malala may get a shot at some big post 20 years later. Fine. If she was good keep her if bad remove her but she has equal right to be pm as you and me..
 
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Really did he came back to serve his country? Remind me of his services to the country, can he even pronounce word Pakistan correctly. No wonder people like you exist in the Pakistan and the state of Pakistan is in.
He studied in Oxford and you talk about him as if he is nobody. How did he win elections twice? 🤔
 
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Hey, Thank God I moved to America... Pakistan is a lost cause, and Pakistani people are equally to be blamed :(
 
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Latest in the long rich line of Sepoy military's golden poster child. First Sikander Mirza, then Bhutto, followed by gabloo Nawaz, then BB, then Altaf, followed by daku Zardari, then Ehsanullah Ehsan, then Billawal and now Malala. May the colonial sepoys and their native manufactured sham democratic front persons prosper and live on forever.
 
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She is anti establishment, anti IK and pro PDM , PTM , thus she would never become popular in pak
1. Not just that, what other competencies has she acquired in her education or advocacy to make her the best qualified to become the PM and manage Pakistan.

2. If she is being promoted as a serious candidate expected by westerners, then it should be indicative of the kind of government the west wants to deal with. The fact that Pakistan is expected to seriously contemplate accommodating such kowtowing is an affront to national sovereignty.
 
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Bilawal is no sell off like Malala. He lost grandfather and mother, yet he came back to Pakistan to serve his country.

Serve his pockets more like it. If he really wants serve he needs run with poor instead of flooding their lands.

And he needs to stop being a homosexual which is Haram .
 
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https://malala.org/newsroom/malala-and-ziauddin-yousafzai-visit-pakistan
Malala Fund co-founders Malala and Ziauddin Yousafzai spent the last two days in Pakistan meeting with leaders, educators and young women from flood-impacted communities in Sindh. Through this visit, they aimed to better understand girls’ experiences, refocus international attention on the growing humanitarian crisis and amplify calls for emergency aid.
Malala visited relief sites in Dadu and met with flood-affected women, girls and their families. They spoke with her about their experiences, challenges and asks of leaders. One young woman, 16-year-old Sohaila said: “I want to go to school, but there is so much water. If there was less water, I’d even go through it. Now we are hearing that the flood waters will stay for five months.” The flood has disrupted learning for nearly 3.5 million children. It also destroyed almost half the schools in the Sindh province — those still standing are now temporary shelters or response centres.
Malala and Ziauddin also met with Sindh government officials in Karachi to discuss the challenges facing education in hard-hit areas. She urged leaders in Sindh and across the country to focus on mitigating education loss in their response plans, including working to reinstate schools as learning centres and providing incentives for girls to return to school after the crisis.
Malala speaking with Sohaila. Credit: Amna Zuberi for Malala Fund

Malala speaking with Sohaila. Credit: Amna Zuberi for Malala Fund
Malala meeting with young women in Dadu. Credit: Amna Zuberi for Malala Fund

Malala meeting with young women in Dadu. Credit: Amna Zuberi for Malala Fund

Malala Fund is working for a world where every girl can learn and lead.
Malala Fund is calling for urgent global and regional action to ensure impacted students receive the support and resources they need to return to school. In addition to Malala Fund’s initial emergency relief grant, Malala Fund has committed up to $700,000 (PKR 154 Million) to organisations in Pakistan, an investment that includes direct funding to local partners and partnerships to support flood relief.
“The scale of the destruction is astounding and the psychosocial and economic impact on the lives of people, especially women and girls cannot be overstated,” said Malala. “Millions of Pakistanis are suffering the consequences of climate inaction. World leaders must step up, accelerate their response plans and mobilise funds needed to help Pakistan rebuild and support impacted populations.”
Ziauddin Yousafzai added: Pakistan had the second highest rate of out-of-school students with nearly 22 million children facing great barriers to education. Without urgent action to undo the devastation caused by these floods, the education of 12 million more children is at risk. Pakistan is my home — and I want to see every child able to access the education they deserve.”
so two secular liberal a** holes will be replaced by a brand new one.
 
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