Pakistani women’s rights activist in education Malala Yousafzai underwent new surgery nine years after the Tabaliban attack in 2012.
When the regime took control of her city in Pakistan, the activist was shot in the head at the age of 15 for her statements in favor of women and girls to study. “Two weeks ago,” he said, “when US forces withdrew from Afghanistan and the Taliban took control, I was lying on a hospital bed in Boston for my sixth surgery, as doctors continued to repair the damage done to my body.”
“In October 2012, a member of the Pakistani Taliban boarded my school bus and fired a shot in my left temple. The bullet hit my left eye, my skull, and my brain – tearing my facial nerve, shattering my eardrums and breaking my knuckles.” I continued.
Malala also called in emergency procedures for surgeons during the event. “Emergency surgeons in Peshawar, Pakistan, removed bone from my left temporal skull to make room for my brain to swell in response to the wound. Their quick action saved my life, but soon my organs started failing and I was flown to the capital, Islamabad. A week later, the doctors decided I had I need more intensive care and I must be transferred from my home country to continue treatment.”
“During that time, I was in an induced coma. I don’t remember anything from the day of the shooting until the moment I woke up at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, UK. When I opened my eyes, I was relieved to find that I was alive. But I didn’t know where I was or why I was surrounded by strangers who spoke English.”
She even talked about the damage to her skull. “I touched my stomach; it felt stiff and stiff. I asked the nurse if there was any stomach problem. She told me that when the Pakistani surgeons removed part of my skull bone, they moved it to my stomach and that I would do it one day It’s another surgery to put it back in my head. But the doctors in the kingdom United eventually decided to put a titanium plate in place of the bones of my skull, reducing the risk of infection, in a procedure called cranioplasty,” he revealed.
Malala learned of the takeover of Afghanistan the day he would have his last surgery. “On August 9 in Boston, I woke up at five in the morning to go to the hospital for my last surgery and saw the news of the Taliban’s capture of Kunduz, the first major city to fall in Afghanistan. With a bandage wrapped around my head, I watched county after county fall on men armed with shotguns like The man who shot me.”
“As soon as I could sit back, I started making phone calls, writing letters to heads of state around the world and talking to women’s rights activists still in Afghanistan. It’s a safe place. But I know we can’t save everyone,” he added.
Finally, she wrote, “The wounds are from my recent surgery. I still have the scar on my back as the doctors removed the bullet from my body.”
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