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Hardline Pakistani cleric detained for threatening Malala Yousafzai
A firebrandÌýPakistaniÌýscholar has beenÌýdetainedÌýfor making death threats against Nobel prize laureate over her comments on marriage, officials said on Friday.
Since surviving an assassination attempt by the Taliban at aged 15 in , the Oxford graduate has become a global figure promoting education for girls.
But a recent interview with the stirred debate in her home country - where she is already a divisive figure - when she questioned whether a legal union between a couple was necessary.Ìý
The issue was debated by MPs in her home province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, who said her comments were against Islam.
"MalalaÌýis dreaming to become the country's prime minister but promoting obscenity,"ÌýclericÌýSardar Ali told students of a local seminary in the northwestern city of Lakki Marwat last week.
He added that he would blow her up in a suicide attack if she returned.
Police official Wasim Sajjad told AFP Sardar Ali had been charged with making threats, hate speech, and inciting terrorism.
The arrest was confirmed by a second senior police official, Muhammad Imran.
Last yearÌýYousafzaiÌýcalled out Prime Minister Imran Khan on Twitter, after a Taliban militant who claimed to have been behind her attack escaped from detention.
She appeared on the front cover of the British edition of Vogue magazine last week dressed in a full-length designer gown and head scarf.Ìý
"If you want to have a person in your life, why do you have to sign marriage papers, why can't it just be a partnership?" she asked, in an interview where she said she was still deciding what to do after finishing her degree.
Though celebrated in many quarters,ÌýYousafzaiÌýhas received backlash in Pakistan over the years, where some say global attention on the attempt on her life has given the country a bad reputation.
She is also criticised for her perceived championing of Western liberal values, and has faced constant scrutiny over her clothing and views on world affairs.