Google –AFP, 6 Sep 2013
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Malala
Yousafzai was awarded the International Children's Peace Prize
at The Hague, on
September 6, 2013 (ANP/AFP, Bas Czerwinski)
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THE HAGUE —
Pakistani teen Malala Yousafzai, shot in the head last year by the Taliban for
campaigning for girls' education, vowed Friday to intensify her struggle for
"a world where everyone can go to school."
Speaking at
a ceremony in The Hague where she was awarded the 2013 International Children's
Peace Prize, Malala said last October's attack on her had made her more
determined than ever to continue her campaign.
"I was
just one target for their violence," Malala said in her acceptance speech,
referring to her near-fatal shooting when a Taliban gunman's bullet grazed her
brain.
"There
are many others for whom we must continue... so that children all over the
world can have a right to go to school," she said to thunderous applause.
Malala, 16,
received her prize from the 2011 Nobel Peace laureate, Yemeni journalist and
activist Tawakkol Karman, who told a humbled Malala "you are my
hero."
"You
cried: 'No one can stop me or any girl from learning'," Karman told
Malala, speaking in Arabic in an address praising the Pakistani teen's
achievement.
"The
bullet aimed at your head at that moment was a milestone in the history of your
country," arman said at the ceremony at the historic Knight's Hall near
the Dutch parliament.
After she
was shot, Malala was given life-saving treatment in Britain where she now
lives.
Her brave
fight for survival and her speech at the United Nations in July have made her a
leading contender for this year's Nobel Peace Prize.
But the
response to her in Pakistan has been mixed, with many hailing her as a national
heroine while others have criticised her for promoting a "Western"
agenda.
The
International Children's Peace Prize, an initiative of the Dutch-based
KidsRights Foundation, was launched in 2005 and set off by former Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev when he chaired the Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates in Rome.
It carries
a cash value of 100,000 euros ($133,000) that is invested in projects relating
to the winner's cause.
Last year's
winner was 13-year-old Cris "Kesz" Valdez for his work with Filipino
street children while he himself was destitute.

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