London: The doctors in UK, who are treating Pakistani teenage rights activist Malala Yousufzai, are hopeful of her recovery, as per a BBC report.
“Clearly it would be inappropriate on every level, not least for her, to put her through all of this if there was no hope of decent recovery,” said Hospital Medical Director Dr David Rosser in a report. Rosser further said that some doctors have observed that the girl had “a chance of making a good recovery”.
14-year-old Malala was seriously injured in a barbaric assassination attempt by the Taliban last week.
Malala is undergoing series of tests as part of her treatment and an update on her condition can be known only by Tuesday.
Malala was transferred to Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham on Monday, where British servicemen who are seriously wounded in Afghanistan are treated and it has a specialist major trauma centre.
The transfer was kept “top secret” in view of threats to her life, including a warning from the Taliban that it would target her again.
She was accompanied by a team of Pakistan Army doctors and a British medical unit in a specially equipped air ambulance provided by the royal family of the United Arab Emirates.