Malala: The
real story with evidence.
In
September 2012, a 15-year-old school girl from Pakistan’s Swat valley was
reported to have been shot in the face and head by a Taliban activist.
The attack caused outrage around the world and the news was
given widespread coverage in the local and international media.
Malala was reported to have barely survived after doctors in
Pakistan and then England performed multiple surgeries on her face and head.
Today Malala lives in the UK and has repeatedly vowed to
continue working for the cause of the cause of women’s education in Pakistan,
especially in those areas of the country where extremists and militant outfits
are said to have been blowing up girl’s school.
But this is just one side of the whole story. The narrative
about what really happened on the day Malala was allegedly shot has mostly been
weaved by the Western media.
In April this year, Dawn.com sent a group of its most
seasoned reporters to Swat to undertake an intensive five-month investigation
of the event. Their collective findings unearthed a series of some stunning
disclosures with evidence that are bound to affectively challenge the
mainstream narrative of the Malala story.
The following are the major findings of the
investigation: