teases: on • reblogs: on

ShortFormBlog

Read a little. Learn a lot. • Ask Us Stuff!FAQArchiveTimeline

Tagged: Taliban

Our best freaking stuff right now:

April 13, 2013
15:06 • 1 month ago

  • 9people killed in the bombing of a bus in Pakistan, in Peshawar, a city in the country’s norrthwest. Injuries were sustained by another 9 people in the blast. The region the bus was bombed in has been the site of operations against the Pakistani Taliban, as well as other militants, though nobody has yet claimed responsibility. source

April 3, 2013
15:08 • 1 month ago

  • 44 people were killed after nine Taliban suicide bombers stormed a courtroom, in Afghanistan’s Farah province, where 10 other militants were facing trial. According to the Taliban, all 10 of those facing trial managed to escape during the attack, which claimed the lives of both civilians and Afghan security force members. source

February 20, 2013
17:43 • 2 months ago
February 4, 2013
08:58 • 3 months ago
February 2, 2013
14:43 • 3 months ago

  • 23Pakistanis killed in an early morning raid on an army camp just east of North Waziristan, which is used as a base of operations for militant groups, al-Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban included. The Taliban that has claimed responsibility for the attack, waged in the dark hours of the early morning with rocket-propelled grenades and suicide bombs — a spokesman claimed the assault was in retaliation for Pakistan’s allowance of U.S. drone strikes, which killed two of their commanders near the Afghan border. source

January 15, 2013
15:56 • 4 months ago
digg:

markcoatney:

theonion:

SPONSORED: The Taliban Is A Vibrant And Thriving Political Movement: Full Story

Honestly, The Onion will never let us down. 

Ever.

And The Onion wins everything. 

digg:

markcoatney:

theonion:

SPONSORED: The Taliban Is A Vibrant And Thriving Political Movement: Full Story

Honestly, The Onion will never let us down. 

Ever.

And The Onion wins everything. 

Follow us on Facebook:
January 5, 2013
15:04 • 4 months ago
inothernews:

DEFIANCE  Pakistani schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai, center, with members of hospital staff, left Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, England. The 15-year-old girl was shot by the Taliban in October for campaigning for girls’ education. (Photo: AFP-Getty Images via The Wall Street Journal)

A big day for Malala Yousafzai, as well as the countless people around the world who’ve been moved by her spirit, and harrowing plight.

inothernews:

DEFIANCE  Pakistani schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai, center, with members of hospital staff, left Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, England. The 15-year-old girl was shot by the Taliban in October for campaigning for girls’ education. (Photo: AFP-Getty Images via The Wall Street Journal)

A big day for Malala Yousafzai, as well as the countless people around the world who’ve been moved by her spirit, and harrowing plight.

November 20, 2012
19:23 • 6 months ago

  • 4 U.S. residents charged on allegations they planned to join the Taliban in Afghanistan for training, and ultimately sought to join al-Qaeda. Three of the men, Ralph Deleon, Miguel Alejandro Santana Vidriales, and Arifeen David Gojali, appeared in court in Los Angeles today, while the fourth, Sohiel Omar Kabir, is presently detained in Afghanistan. The group’s alleged intentions were reportedly found out through their social media statements, as well as by a chat unwittingly held with an FBI agent. source

November 10, 2012
17:13 • 6 months ago
We held a special prayer for Malala in our school assembly and also lit candles. We did not organise any open event because our school and its students still face a security threat.
Mariam Khalid, principal of Khushhal Public School in Pakistan • Discussing her school’s marking of “Malala Day.” After the attempted killing of 15-year-old Malala Yousafzai by the Pakistani Taliban last month, the United Nations called for today to be “a global day of action” in her honor. Vigils are anticipated throughout the world, both recognizing Malala and the cause that nearly killed her, education for girls and women. For her school and classmates, an assembly was held and a prayer given, but they aren’t able to honor openly — fear of reprisal from the Taliban on the occasion prevented the holding of a public event. source
October 24, 2012
14:53 • 6 months ago
The Taliban have kidnapped me and tortured me in the past for promoting women’s development, but now they are threatening the entire family.
Reyatullah Khan, father of 17-year-old Pakistani activist Hinna Khan - Hinna recently received a phone call, allegedly from Taliban gunmen in Pakistan’s Swat valley, claiming that she and her family would be killed if they did not stop speaking out against the militant group. Her parents have long opposed the Taliban presence in Pakistan, and were thrown out of their home for such opposition during the Taliban takeover of the Swat valley in 2009. Many believe the Taliban are attempting to re-establish legitimacy in the region after gunmen, who opened fired at point blank range, failed to kill 14-year-old Malala Yousufzai earlier this month. source
Recent posts and stuff we dig:
October 20, 2012
15:51 • 7 months ago
thedailywhat:

‘The Girl Who Just Wants To Learn’ Opens Her Eyes of the Day: Malala Yousafzai, the 14-year-old Pakistani education activist shot by the Taliban last week on her way home from school, is awake and walking, according to her doctors in the U.K.:
Malala is now well enough… she is happy… she’s communicating very freely, she’s writing.
However, she’s “not out of the woods” yet.
She is still showing some signs of infection, which is probably related to the bullet track. [There is] some infection in the bullet track, which is our key source of concern.
Doctors estimate she will need a few weeks to rehabilitate further, then part of her skull will need to be reconstructed.
[bbc]

Wonderful news that she’s come so far, albeit with the health dangers and both physical and mental ordeals she still faces. Hoping the best.

thedailywhat:

‘The Girl Who Just Wants To Learn’ Opens Her Eyes of the Day: Malala Yousafzai, the 14-year-old Pakistani education activist shot by the Taliban last week on her way home from school, is awake and walking, according to her doctors in the U.K.:

Malala is now well enough… she is happy… she’s communicating very freely, she’s writing.

However, she’s “not out of the woods” yet.

She is still showing some signs of infection, which is probably related to the bullet track. [There is] some infection in the bullet track, which is our key source of concern.

Doctors estimate she will need a few weeks to rehabilitate further, then part of her skull will need to be reconstructed.

[bbc]

Wonderful news that she’s come so far, albeit with the health dangers and both physical and mental ordeals she still faces. Hoping the best.

October 18, 2012
15:40 • 7 months ago
An infamous Taliban cleric from Pakistan’s Swat valley is believed to be the man who ordered the assassination of Malala Yousufzai while she was on her way to school last week. The 14-year-old female activist survived multiple gunshots from point-blank range, and is currently in the UK under the watch of medical experts following a successful surgery to have a bullet near her spinal cord removed. Militant leader Mullah Fazlullah is currently on the run from both NATO and Pakistani forces, no longer thought to be in day-to-day command of his Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Sharia, and possibly hiding in the Konar province of Afghanistan. source

An infamous Taliban cleric from Pakistan’s Swat valley is believed to be the man who ordered the assassination of Malala Yousufzai while she was on her way to school last week. The 14-year-old female activist survived multiple gunshots from point-blank range, and is currently in the UK under the watch of medical experts following a successful surgery to have a bullet near her spinal cord removed. Militant leader Mullah Fazlullah is currently on the run from both NATO and Pakistani forces, no longer thought to be in day-to-day command of his Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Sharia, and possibly hiding in the Konar province of Afghanistan. source

October 16, 2012
15:16 • 7 months ago
She used to propagate against mujahideen (holy warriors) to defame (the) Taliban. The Quran says that people propagating against Islam and Islamic forces would be killed. We targeted her because she would speak against the Taliban while sitting with shameless strangers and idealized the biggest enemy of Islam, Barack Obama.
Pakistan’s Taliban, via a written statement • Addressing the militant group’s decision to ambush a school bus carrying 14-year-old female activist Malala Yousufzai last week. Yousufzai became a vocal opponent of the Taliban after the group closed a number of all-female schools in Pakistan’s Swat valley, including the school which Malala attended at the time. She was airlifted from Pakistan to the UK yesterday to undergo additional treatment following successful surgery to remove a bullet near her spinal cord. “We did not attack her for raising voice for education,” the Taliban said in the statement, adding, “We targeted her for opposing mujahideen and their war. Shariah (Islamic law) says that even a child can be killed if he is propagating against Islam.” source
October 15, 2012
14:53 • 7 months ago

More posts:

 

ShortFormBlog is the product of Ernie Smith, Seth Millstein, Chris Tognotti, Sami Main, Scott Craft, Matthew Keys, Julius the laid-off RSS robot, awesome links from awesome sources, a hacked version of Wordpress, Tumblr's Tumblarity, the letter Q, the number 13 and a series of tubes.

Copyright 2009-2013 Ernie SmithAsk us stuff!E-mail usFollow us on TwitterFollow us on Facebook

    TwitterCounter for @shortformblog   Real Time Web Analytics   Creative Commons License Real Time Web Analytics