BIRMINGHAM – British doctors said Thursday they were pleased with Malala’s progress as she remained in a stable condition.The teenager is being treated at a hospital in Birmingham, central England, having been flown to Britain on Monday for specialist care.“Malala Yousafzai’s condition remains stable. She spent a third comfortable night in the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham and doctors are pleased with her progress so far,” the hospital said in a statement.“The various specialist consultants from both the Queen Elizabeth and Birmingham Children’s hospitals continue to assess her on a daily basis.”Participants held small cardboard placards reading “I am Malala”, lit white candles, and laid two bunches of pink and yellow flowers on the ground.An Amina Women’s Group member told reporters: “Brave Malala said what so many of us wish to say but we are too afraid.“A girl of 14 spoke out for the rights of women and girls in a region where fundamentalism is fighting to take hold. For this she was shot in the head. Like so many around the world, we are moved and inspired by her bravery and wish her and her friends a speedy recovery.”Birmingham has a 100,000-strong Pakistani community - a tenth of the city’s population. The Birmingham Mail newspaper said people in Britain’s second city had offered up their homes to Malala’s family while she is being treated. A Queen Elizabeth Hospital spokesman told the daily: “People are offering every kind of help that they can think of. Doctors from around the world are wanting to help medically at the hospital. “We have been contacted by numerous community groups, offering to set up online guestbooks and organise vigils.“And there have been thousands of emails and phone calls from well-wishers. Many of them want to give Malala gifts and cards.” TheNation Monitoring Desk adds: Security forces have detained the family of a man accused of attacking Malala Yousafzai, neighbours of the man’s family said on Thursday, reported New York Times The authorities in the Swat Valley, where the attack happened on October 9, said they were still searching for the man who shot Ms Yousafzai and wounded two other girls on a school bus. The suspect has been identified as a member of the Pakistani Taliban named Attaullah, and the authorities are seeking an accomplice as well. At Attaullah’s family home in Sangota, a hillside hamlet four miles from Mingora, the valley’s main town, neighbours said that the security forces had detained his brother-in-law, an uncle and a brother — a common tactic employed by the police to force a fugitive to surrender. One relative said that one of the detainees, Attaullah’s 18-year-old brother Ehsanullah, had been picked up over a month ago — suggesting that the Taliban fugitive was being sought long before Ms Yousafzai was shot. The other two men, one of whom is a driving instructor from Mingora named Abdul Haleem, were picked up after the attack on Ms Yousafzai. News reports said they were accused of sheltering the militant for a night