The story of Malala’s schoolfriend shows why education must be a right for all children | Gordon Brown
As a child, Ramzan's fight for an education almost cost her her life. Worldwide, there are 222 million children out of school who urgently need our help
- Gordon Brown is chairman of the UN's Education Cannot Wait fund and was UK prime minister between 2007 and 2010
Shazia Ramzan has spent most of her young life fighting for her right - and the right of all girls - to go to school. In 2012, at the age of 14, sitting alongside her friend Malala Yousafzai on a bus that was going from school to her home, in the Swat valley in the north of Pakistan, she was shot at by an extremist intent on stopping girls from getting an education. She suffered injuries from which she, Malala and their friend Kainat took months to recover.
Now completing a nursing degree at Edinburgh University, and preparing to start her own nurses' training school in Pakistan, Shazia almost always has the needs of girls in her home area in her thoughts. In her time between classes, she is raising funds for Pakistani charities that are quietly but effectively helping Afghan girls who have been losing out on their education since the Taliban shut them out of the country's secondary schools.
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