Afghanistan accuses Pakistan of targeting homes in strikes that kill civilians

Fighting between the neighbours has entered its third week.

By contributor Abdul Qafar Afghan and Munir Ahmed, Associated Press
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Supporting image for story: Afghanistan accuses Pakistan of targeting homes in strikes that kill civilians
Taliban police guard the area where a strike hit a house in the Momand Dara district of Nangarhar province, Afghanistan, near the border with Pakistan (Hedayat Shah/AP)

Afghanistan’s Taliban government has accused Pakistan’s military of targeting homes in overnight air strikes in Kabul and other areas of the country, saying at least six civilians were killed and more than a dozen injured, as fighting between the neighbours entered its third week.

Afghan government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said on X that Pakistan’s aircraft also struck fuel depots belonging to the private airline Kam Air near the airport in Kandahar in southern Afghanistan.

“This company supplies fuel to civilian airlines as well as to United Nations aircraft,” he said.

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Residents and Taliban police gather the remains of a projectile at the site of a strike in Kabul, Afghanistan (Barackatullah Popal/AP)

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s state-run television reported that the country’s armed forces carried out “successful air strikes inside Afghanistan” as part of the ongoing operation, targeting what it said were four alleged militant hideouts and their support infrastructure in Afghanistan.

The developments come amid a dramatic increase in tensions between the two countries which Pakistan has referred to as “open war”.

They are adding to concerns about the stability in the region as the US-Israeli war against Iran continues with no end in sight, generating great uncertainty.

The dispute is rooted in Pakistan’s belief that Afghanistan’s Taliban government is harbouring militant groups that stage attacks against it and also of allying with its rival India. The Taliban deny harbouring the militant groups.

Pakistan and Afghanistan have been targeting each other’s military installations since late February, when Kabul said it struck Pakistani posts in response to Pakistani attacks along the border.

Pakistan’s military has said its operations targeted the Pakistani Taliban and their support networks along the border.

Both sides have claimed to inflict heavy losses in what has become their deadliest fighting in years.

In Kabul, the Defence Ministry said Afghanistan’s air force responded to the Pakistan attacks by targeting Pakistani military installations in the Kohat district, causing heavy losses.

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Residents inspect the site of a strike in Kabul, Afghanistan (Barackatullah Popal/AP)

Pakistan’s Ministry of Information rejected the Afghan Defence Ministry’s claims as baseless. In a statement, it said the Pakistani Taliban attempted to deploy three rudimentary drones in Kohat, but Pakistani forces shot them down. Two civilians were injured by falling debris, it said.

In his posts on X, Afghan government spokesman Mr Mujahid alleged that Pakistani strikes hit multiple civilian sites and uninhabited locations in Afghanistan’s Paktia and Paktika provinces, as well as other areas. He said the attacks “will not go unanswered”.

Kabul police spokesman Khalid Zadran said at least four civilians, including children, were killed in the city and 15 others were injured.

Additionally, Afghanistan’s Department of Information and Culture in the province of Nangarhar said a Pakistani mortar shell killed a woman and a child there.

The total number of casualties around Afghanistan was unclear.

The latest Pakistani strikes came a day after China’s special envoy, Yue Xiaoyong, arrived in Islamabad and met his Pakistani counterpart, Mohammad Sadiq, following a visit to Kabul.

Mr Sadiq, Pakistan’s special envoy for Afghanistan, said he and Mr Yue “discussed threats posed by terrorist groups” and agreed on the need for collective efforts to ensure lasting peace and stability.

Repeated calls from the international community for restraint have had little effect.

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Residents inspect the site of a strike in Kabul, Afghanistan (Barackatullah Popal/AP)

Pakistan has previously said its strikes along the border and inside Afghanistan are aimed solely at Khawarij, a phrase Islamabad uses for the outlawed Pakistani Taliban, also known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP.

On Friday, a roadside bomb targeting a police vehicle killed six officers in Lakki Marwat, a district in north-west Pakistan, police official Sajjad Khan said. No one claimed responsibility but suspicion is likely to fall on the TTP, which often claim such attacks.

Since the Afghan Taliban returned to power in 2021, the TTP has intensified attacks inside Pakistan and along the border.

Islamabad says its military operations will continue until Kabul takes verifiable steps to curb the TTP and other militants operating from its territory.

A Qatari-mediated ceasefire ended the intense fighting in October, but several rounds of peace talks in Turkey in November failed to produce a lasting agreement.