Malala Yousafzai on Friday said she plans to return to Pakistan permanently once her studies are complete,

She said this during an interview with Geo TV on the second day of her emotional trip back more than five years after being shot by Taliban gunmen.

Security has forced the Nobel prize winner, whose arrival in the country dominated headlines and social media, to keep her itinerary tightly under wraps.

Malala said there was “definitely a difference between the Pakistan of today and in 2012", when she was airlifted to a British hospital after being shot in the head by Taliban gunmen angered over her stance as an advocate for girls' education.

“Things are becoming better, people are uniting and a campaign for better Pakistan is ongoing, people are active which is very good.”

The Oxford student, who has said that she wants to run for prime minister one day, added: “It is my plan to return to Pakistan after completing my education because it is my country and I have equal rights on it like any other Pakistani.”

Her comments came after she broke down in tears as she delivered an emotional televised speech a day earlier saying it was a “dream” to be back in the country after so many years.

Also read: Twitter welcomes Malala, shuts down haters as she makes surprise visit to Pakistan

Malala is widely respected internationally as a global icon for girls' education, but opinion is divided in Pakistan, where some conservatives view her as a Western agent on a mission to shame her country.

“Pakistan has not done well by its heroes,” an editorial in Dawn on Malala's homecoming said on Friday, noting that the country's other Nobel laureate ─ physicist Abdus Salaam ─ had been widely shunned for being a member of the persecuted Ahmadi minority.

With intense criticism among the many messages of welcome, even the people she is meeting have been kept in the dark about her presence.

Women's rights activist Nighat Dad said that she and a group of other women from across Pakistan who were gathered on Thursday were not told they would be seeing Malala until the last moment.

The organiser, Oscar-winning director Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, only told them “It'll be the highlight of your year,” Dad said ─ adding that she had been right.

Changing lives

Malala became a global symbol for human rights after a gunman boarded her school van on October 9, 2012, asked “Who is Malala?” and shot her.

The Pakistani Taliban accused her of “anti-Islamic” activities and of “smearing” the militant group in statements released after the attack.

She was treated for her injuries in the British city of Birmingham, where she also completed her schooling.

The youngest-ever winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014, she has continued to be a vocal advocate for girls' education while studying at Oxford University.

Swat, Malala's former home in Pakistan's rugged northwest, was overrun by the Taliban in 2007, where they imposed a brutal regime including banning girls from school.

They were pushed out in a military operation in 2009, but security has remained fragile, as the attack on Malala three years later demonstrated.

However, in recent weeks, authorities have lifted prohibitions against tourists visiting the mountainous region, famed for its beauty, as security improves.

Residents say Malala's story has changed the lives of other girls in the area.

“Parents are sending their girls to school so Malala has been successful in her aim,” Swat resident Shahista Hakeem told AFP.

Many of those who live in the area were happy to hear of Malala's return to Pakistan, Hakeem said, adding: “We want that she should come to Swat also. “

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