LONDON
(Reuters) - Two people wanting to visit the Pakistani girl wounded by
Taliban gunmen raised suspicion in Britain on Tuesday after turning up
overnight at the hospital where she is undergoing treatment, the
hospital and police said.
Authorities are highly
sensitive about Malala Yousufzai's security because the Taliban, who
targeted her for advocating education for girls, say they would again
try to kill the 14-year-old if she survived last week's attack.
Yousufzai was flown from
Pakistan to Birmingham to receive specialist treatment after the
shooting, which drew widespread condemnation. She has become a potent
symbol of resistance to the radical Islamist group's effort to deny
women an education.
"A number of people turned
up claiming to be members of Malala's family which we don't believe to
be true," Dave Rosser, the hospital's medical director, told Britain's
Sky News. "They didn't get very far. Security is well under control."
"They were stopped in a public area of the hospital and questioned by police, who recorded their details and advised the pair that they would not be allowed to see her," West Midlands Police said in a statement, describing them as "well-wishers".
There are a large number of Asian Muslims in Birmingham's population. The Pakistani diaspora in Britain is estimated to number 1.2 million.
Yousufzai has been in critical condition since gunmen shot her in the head and neck as she left school in Swat, northwest of Islamabad.
In Pakistan, Taliban
insurgents said on Tuesday she deserved to die because she had spoken
out against their group and praised U.S. President Barack Obama.
British doctors have said
Yousufzai has every chance of making a "good recovery" at a special
hospital unit expert in dealing with complex trauma cases. It has
treated hundreds of soldiers wounded in Afghanistan.
"It's obvious that Malala
will need reconstructive surgery. We have international experts in that
field," Rosser said, adding that she had had a comfortable night on
Monday and that doctors are pleased with her progress.
Yousufzai began standing
up to the Pakistani Taliban when she was 11, when the Islamabad
government had effectively ceded control of the Swat Valley where she
lives to the militants.
The attack was the
culmination of years of campaigning that had pitted the girl against one
of Pakistan's most ruthless Taliban commanders, Maulana Fazlullah.
(Additional reporting by Stephen Addison; writing by Maria Golovnina; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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