Terrorism did not slow down in 2012 unfortunately,
thousands of people were killed across the globe in terrorist atrocities. Yet most
of those attacks took place in just a handful of countries:
Country
|
Attacks*
|
Dead
|
Iraq
|
55
|
1,676
|
Afghanistan
|
35
|
543
|
Nigeria
|
21
|
511
|
Pakistan
|
30
|
425
|
Yemen
|
14
|
328
|
Somalia
|
11
|
78
|
Russia
|
9
|
51
|
Kenya
|
8
|
47
|
Colombia
|
5
|
31
|
China
|
2
|
26
|
*Co-ordinated attacks that take place on one day are
counted as one attack.
Looking at this rather horrifying table you can see that
Iraq had the worst year of any country. Terrorists killed over three times as
many people as in Afghanistan, the second worst affected country. One of the
most prominent terrorist attacks of the year was not in Iraq or Afghanistan,
but Pakistan; the shooting of 15 year old Malala Yousafzai. Thankfully Malala
survived and is recovering well in a British hospital. There were protests all
across Pakistan against the assassination attempt and 50 Islamic clerics issued
a fatwā against the
perpetrators. Despite this the Taliban claim they still want to kill her and
her father. So what was her ‘crime’? Trying to get young girls into education
in Pakistan, this infuriated the Taliban who are anti-education especially when
it comes to women. As Malala rose to fame in Pakistan, the Taliban increasingly
sent death threats to her home and on the internet. But she continued in her
struggle, in 2011 Desmond Tutu nominated her for the International Children’s
Peace Prize and later won Pakistan’s first National Youth Prize. Time magazine
recently selected her as the runner up of Time Magazine’s person of the year.
There was some pleasant news on the terrorist front,
Anders Breivik, was finally sentenced to Prison for this mass shooting and
bombing in July 2011. There is finally
closure for the families of the 77 killed and those that were on the island of
Utøya on that fateful day.
Up until November 2012, Northern Ireland was relatively
quiet on the terrorism front, apart from the odd bomb scare. Then on the 1st
of November a prison officer was shot dead. Then trouble began after Belfast
City Council voted to fly the Union flag on certain days of the year. That seriously
upset some unionists who for the past few weeks have been causing chaos across
Northern Ireland, but particularly in Belfast.
Terrorism is something that will likely always exist, it
will never go away but certain places such as the Basque region, Northern
Ireland and Sri Lanka all prove that things can be done to improve the
situation, to show the terrorists that talking produces better results. The West
should learn from these if it ever wants to truly ‘defeat the Taliban’.
Malala Yousafzai's page in Time Magazine |
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