Pakistani Taliban gunmen shot 15-year-old Malala Yousufzai on her school bus a month ago in Mingora in northwestern Swat Valley for speaking out against the militants and raising her voice for girls’ rights to go to school.—Photo courtesy Nighat Dad

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani government plans to honour Malala Yousafzai, the 15-year-old education campaigner shot by Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) gunmen, by opening special schools in her name for poor children, officials said on Monday.

The “Malala Schools” are planned for 16 areas around Pakistan affected by conflict or natural disasters, Nafisa Shah, chairwoman of the National Commission for Human Development, told AFP.

The aim is to give children in these areas, who often have little in the way of educational opportunities, a chance to go to school, Shah said, but added that money for the scheme had not yet been found.

“We have identified the places and (will) soon launch a fundraising scheme to generate finances for these schools,” Shah said.

Each school will have two classrooms, a verandah, a toilet and space to extend the building if needed. It will cost 800,000 rupees ($8,220) and provide basic education to both girls and boys.

The government has announced a plan to pay poor families to send their children to school and UN education envoy Gordon Brown held talks in Islamabad at the weekend to begin a plan to bring more than five million out-of-school youngsters into the classroom.

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