again and was rewarded on 6 December with my first trip out of the hospital. I told Yma that I loved
nature so she arranged for two staff to take me and my mother on
an outing to the Birmingham
Botanical Gardens, not far from the hospital. They didn’t let my father come as they thought he would
be recognised, having been in the media a lot. Even so I was very happy,
my first time back in the
outside world, seeing Birmingham and England.
They told me to sit in the back of the car in the middle, not next to a window, which was annoying
as I wanted to see everything in this new country. I didn’t realise they were trying to protect my head
from any bump. When we entered the gardens and I saw all the green plants and trees, it was a
powerful reminder of home. I kept saying, ‘This one is in my valley,’ and, ‘We also have this one.’ I
am very proud of the beautiful plants of my valley. It was odd seeing all the other visitors, for whom
it was just a normal day out. I felt like Dorothy at the end of her journey. My mother was so excited
she called my father. ‘For the first time I am happy,’ she said. But it was ice cold and so we went into
the café and had delicious tea and cakes, something called a ‘cream tea’.
Two days after that I had my first visitor from outside the family – the president of Pakistan, Asif
Zardari. The hospital did not want him to come as they knew it would mean a media frenzy, but it was
difficult for my father to refuse. Not only was Mr Zardari our head
of state but he had said the
government would pay all my medical bills, which would end up being around £200,000. They had
also rented an apartment for my parents in the centre of Birmingham so they could move out of the
hostel. The visit was on Saturday, 8 December, and the whole thing was like something out of a James
Bond movie.
There were a lot of journalists gathered outside from early on, who naturally assumed the president
would be brought to me in the hospital. Instead I was wrapped up in a big purple parka with a hood,
taken down through the staff entrance and driven to the hospital offices. We drove right past
journalists and photographers, some of whom were up in trees, and they did not even notice. Then I
sat
and waited in an office, playing a game called Elf Bowling on the computer and beating my
brother Atal even though it was the first time I had played it. When Zardari and his party arrived in
two cars they were brought in through the back. He came with about ten people including his chief of
staff, his military secretary and the Pakistan High Commissioner in London, who had taken over from
Dr Fiona as my official guardian in the UK till my parents arrived.
The president was first briefed by doctors not to mention my face. Then he came in to see me with
his youngest daughter Asifa, who is a few years older than me. They brought me a bouquet of flowers.
He touched my head, which is our tradition, but my father was worried as I had nothing but skin, no
bone to protect my brain, and my head beneath the shawl was concave. Afterwards the president sat
with my father, who told him that we were fortunate I had been brought to the UK. ‘She might have
survived in Pakistan but she wouldn’t have had the rehabilitation and would have been disfigured,’ he
said. ‘Now her smile will return.’
Mr Zardari told the high commissioner to give my father a post as education attaché so he would
have a salary to live on and a diplomatic passport so he would not need to seek asylum to stay in the
UK. My father was relieved as he was wondering how he would pay for things. Gordon Brown, in his
UN role, had also asked him to be his adviser,
an unpaid position, and the president said that was
fine; he could be both. After the meeting Mr Zardari described me to the media as ‘a remarkable girl
and a credit to Pakistan’. But still not everyone in Pakistan was so positive. Though my father had
tried to keep it from me I knew some people were saying he had shot me, or that I wasn’t shot at all,
and we had staged it so we could live overseas.
The new year of 2013 was a happy one when I was discharged from
hospital in early January
finally to live with my family again. The Pakistan High Commission had rented two serviced
apartments for us in a building in a modern square in the centre of Birmingham. The apartments were
on the tenth floor, which was higher than any of us had ever been before. I teased my mother, as after
the earthquake when we were in a three-storey building she said she would never again live in an
apartment block. My father told me that when they arrived she had been so scared that she had said, ‘I
will die in this lift!’
We were so happy to be a family again. My brother Khushal was as annoying as always. The boys
were bored cooped
up waiting for me to recover, away from school and their friends, though Atal
was excited by everything new. I quickly realised I could treat them how I liked and I wouldn’t get
told off.
It was a cold winter, and as I watched the snow falling outside through the big glass
windows I wished I could run around and chase the snowflakes like we used to back home.
Sometimes we went for walks to build up my strength though I tired easily.
In the square was a fountain and a Costa coffee bar with glass walls through which you could see
men and women chatting and mixing in a way that would be unthinkable in Swat. The apartment was
just off Broad Street, a famous road of shops, night clubs and stripbars. We went to the shops though I
still did not like shopping. At nights our eyes were all out on stalks at the skimpy clothes that women
wore – tiny shorts almost like knickers and bare legs on the highest heels even in the middle of
winter. My mother was so horrified that she cried, ‘
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