The family of Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai have become millionaires from her best-selling memoirs and speaking engagements, MailOnline stated on Wednesday.
Four years after she was shot in Pakistan, MailOnline revealed that a company set up to protect the rights to her life story has made a pre-tax profit of £1.1million.
The 18-year-old schoolgirl — who was 14 when shot in the Swat Valley after her support for girls’ education angered Taliban militants — is a joint shareholder of the company, Salarzai Ltd.
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Her book I Am Malala, published in 2013 in Britain, in a deal estimated at £2 million has since sold at least 1.8 million copies worldwide, tells the story of her growing up in Pakistan.
Malala has become a sought-after speaker since her ordeal, and a report by the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington DC claims she is paid a whopping £114,000 per speech.
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A spokesman for Malala told MailOnline on Wednesday: “Since the publication of Malala’s book, Malala and her family have donated more than $1 million (£750,000) to charities, mostly for education-focused projects across the world including Pakistan.”
Malala has become a sought-after speaker since her horrifying ordeal, and a report by the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington DC claims she is paid a whopping £114,000 per speech.
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Just last week Malala told a crowd in London’s Trafalgar Square at a memorial to Jo Cox that the murdered MP, who was killed earlier this month in West Yorkshire, was a ‘modern day suffragette’.
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