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Regular-article-logo Sunday, 05 May 2024

15 Afghan civilians die in Pakistani clashes

Anger over border closure because of virus fears sparks protests and artillery barrages

Taimoor Shah , Mujib Mashal Kandahar Published 01.08.20, 12:14 AM
Sadia Shirzad, 7, studies on a hilltop on the the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Tuesday

Sadia Shirzad, 7, studies on a hilltop on the the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Tuesday AP

Some of the most intense border clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan in recent years left at least 15 civilians dead on the Afghan side on Thursday, officials said.

Afghanistan accused Pakistani forces of firing heavy artillery into civilian areas after protests by communities on both sides who were demanding the reopening of a nearby border crossing that Pakistan had closed to try to limit the spread of the coronavirus.

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Hayatullah Hayat, the governor of Kandahar province, where the clashes occurred, said the worst barrage of Pakistani artillery started around 7pm and struck the Spin Boldak area. In addition to the deaths, at least 80 other civilians were wounded, he said.

Afghan security officials said they had retaliated with rockets. Social media videos apparently filmed from the Pakistani side showed the dark sky lit up by intense crossfire.

Pakistani officials did not immediately comment on the reports of shelling. News outlets reported that officials from the local Pakistani government in Balochistan province had arrived at the border to assess the situation.

General Yasin Zia, the chief of Afghanistan’s army, has ordered the three army corps stationed along the border areas to be “fully ready to retaliate to the Pakistani military in kind” and put his country’s special forces and air force on the “highest alert”, Afghanistan’s defence ministry said in a statement. The ministry estimated the number of dead at nine, including a child.

Movement across the porous border had been restricted by the Pakistani side in recent months over concern about the pandemic, which has hit both countries hard. The restrictions particularly affected communities on two sides of the Chaman crossing, people who rely on easy border trade, either as labourers or smugglers, for a living.

For several weeks, protesters had continued a sit-in on the Pakistani side of the crossing in Chaman demanding the resumption of normal flow. In June, Pakistan reopened for commercial trucks, but the crossing remained shut for travellers and labourers.

The border was opened for travellers stuck on the two sides on Wednesday, but the protest to allow the routine crossing of labourers had continued.

The situation grew tense on the Pakistani side on Thursday, with reports of Pakistani forces opening fire on protesters during clashes and killing at least two people. The protesters torched a Covid-19 quarantine facility.

When thousands of travellers stuck on the Afghan side rushed for the crossing in the chaos, they were met by Pakistani fire that also struck Afghan border police facilities. The situation erupted into full-on clashes that intensified late into the night, witnesses said.

Afghan officials and residents in Spin Boldak district said heavy artillery fire from the Pakistani side forced hundreds of families to flee their homes from border villages last night. The clashes at the southern border were just a week after Afghan officials said Pakistani forces had fired dozens of mortar shells into the Sarkano district of eastern Kunar province, killing eight civilians.

The two countries share a long border, about 1,500 miles, that was drawn by the British in the 19th century and that left ethnic Pashtun tribes split. Consecutive Afghan governments have questioned the legitimacy of the division, known as the Durand Line, as an official border.

Efforts by Pakistani government to build reinforced fences and security checkpoints along the border has angered Afghan officials and communities in the area.

18 killed in blast

At least 18 people, including Afghan security forces personnel, were killed in a suspected car-bombing in eastern Afghanistan on Thursday, hours before a three-day ceasefire was to begin in the country for the Id-ul-Zoha festival, officials said.

The ceasefire, announced by the Taliban, comes at a time violence has risen across the war-torn country as US-brokered peace talks between the militant group and an Afghan government-mandated committee await the completion of a prisoner exchange between the two sides.

The Taliban denied responsibility for the bombing in a statement from spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid. The explosion targeted Afghan security forces in Pul-e-Alan, the capital of the eastern province of Logar.

New York Times News Service and Reuters

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