Malala has become a household name around the world for her unrelenting advocacy of girls’ education. She has been outspoken on this issue for years with schools in the Swat Valley, a region of northwestern Pakistan, which is regularly attacked by the Taliban.
After being shot in October 2012, Malala was sent to the United Kingdom for emergency surgery and has subsequently settled in the English city of Birmingham.
The attack has not silenced Malala, and this week she published a memoir and gave several high-profile interviews, including one to ABC’s Diane Sawyer. In Pakistan she has drawn criticism from a section of the right wing, who accuse her of folding to Western political pressure and culture. It’s an accusation she vehemently denies.
In the statement given by Schulz, he highlighted the strength Malala has shown. “Malala bravely stands for the rights of all children to be granted a fair education. This right for girls is too commonly neglected.â€
The Sakharov human rights prize was created in 1988 to honor Andrei Sakharov, a Soviet physicist and dissident. Also among the nominees this year were three Belarusian dissidents and former NSA employee Edward Snowden.
Malala is currently in New York and will find out tomorrow whether she will win the Nobel Peace Prize. She will receive the Sakharov Prize at a ceremony in Strasburg on Nov. 20.
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