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    Afghan Taliban dread restriction on young ladies' schooling: Malala


    Pakistani Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai has communicated worry that the Taliban would keep a restriction on young ladies' schooling in Afghanistan. 

    Malala Yousafzai, who was harmed in a Pakistani Taliban assault on a mission for young ladies' schooling in 2012, told the BBC: Don't be impermanent. ' 

    She said a comparable boycott "went on for a long time" during the Taliban's first visit to the country in 1996. 

    In the wake of recovering power in August this year, the Taliban banned auxiliary school children from considering in September and requested young men to get back to school. 

    The Taliban have asserted that whenever security is guaranteed, they will permit young ladies to get back to schools saved for ladies just, yet many are wary of the Taliban's guarantee. 

    Malala is among the individuals who say, "We are approaching the Taliban to promptly permit young ladies admittance to full schooling." We approach the G20 nations and other world pioneers to guarantee that the privileges of young ladies in Afghanistan are secured. " 

    Malala, 24, who as of late sealed the deal, sent an open letter to the Taliban last month encouraging them to lift the prohibition on young ladies' schooling. 

    Malala, 15, was injured in a school van assault by Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) assailants in the Swat Valley. 

    Malala Yousafzai, who composed a book named 'IM Malala', recuperated following quite a while of treatment at home and abroad. 

    Malala was granted the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014 at 17 years old. 

    She moved on from Oxford University last year with a degree in way of thinking, governmental issues and financial aspects.

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