Nobel Peace Prize winner 2013 , 2013 Children's Peace Prize
Malala awarded 2013 Children's Peace Prize
Pakistani 16-year-old will receive the award from 2011 Nobel Peace Prize winner and women's rights
campaigner Tawakkol Karman at a glittering ceremony in The Hague on September
6, the Amsterdam-based organisation said.
Malala "risked her life in the fight for access to
education for girls all over the world," KidsRights said in a statement.
"By awarding the 2013 International Children's Peace
Prize... KidsRights shines the spotlight on a brave and talented child who has
demonstrated special dedication to children's rights," it added.
The passionate advocate for girls education was shot in the
head by a Taliban gunman while on a school bus near her home in Pakistan's Swat
Valley last year.
She was given life-saving treatment in Britain where she now
lives, but the attack galvanised her campaign for greater educational
opportunities for girls.
Malala's brave fight back from her injuries and her speech
at the United Nations in July have made her a leading contender for this year's
Nobel Peace Prize.
But the response to her in Pakistan has been mixed, with
many hailing her as a national heroine while others have criticised her for
promoting a "Western" agenda.
The International Children's Peace Prize, an initiative of
the Dutch-based KidsRights Foundation, was launched in 2005 by former Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev, when he chaired the Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates
in Rome.
It carries a cash value of 100,000 euros ($133,000) that is
invested in projects relating to the winner's cause.
Last year's winner was 13-year-old Cris "Kesz"
Valdez for his work with Filipino street children while he himself was
destitute.
Cris received the prize from South African peace icon and
Nobel Peace laureate Desmond Tutu, who is the award's patron.
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