“Do not legitimise them (Taliban),” she said addressing a global summit in Pakistan on girls’ education in Muslim countries that was attended by more than 150 representatives from dozens of countries except Afghanistan.
Yousafzai stated that the Taliban have implemented more than 100 laws designed to strip away women’s rights, masking their actions under the guise of cultural and religious justification.
“There’s nothing Islamic about this,” she added.
She said that the Taliban want to eliminate women and girls from every aspect of public life.
“They have created a system of gender apartheid.”
The education activist also criticised Israel saying, “In Gaza, Israel has decimated the entire education system.”
“They have bombed all universities, destroyed more than 90 per cent of schools and indiscriminately attacked civilians sheltering in school buildings,” she stated.
Yousafzai said the “urgent crisis of millions of girls who cannot go to school” is not just happening in some small, far-flung communities and not isolated to a few regions or cultural groups - “this is the lived reality of more than 120 million girls globally who are out of school today”.
“And tens of millions of them live in the countries and communities represented in this room,” she said.
“It is a reality that most governments routinely fail to acknowledge or address with the urgency required.”
On Saturday, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said that more than 22 million children are out of school in Pakistan.
“The Muslim world including Pakistan faces significant challenges in ensuring equitable access to education for girls,” he said in his opening remarks of the two-day summit.
Yousafzai, who survived a gunshot to the head by a Pakistani Taliban gunman in 2012 while on a school bus, expressed her happiness at returning to Pakistan, the place where her journey began.
In her address, she said more than 12 million Pakistani girls, one of the highest numbers in the world, are out of school.
Yousafzai’s campaign won her several global honours and in 2014 she became the youngest Nobel laureate at age 17.
(with AAP)