Wednesday, 8 May 2013

Afghan-Pakistan clashes flare for second time in days


* Both sides accuse each other of firing first over border construction
* ISAF spokesman says border issue could be solved via trilateral meeting

JALALABAD: Cross-border clashes flared on Monday between Afghan and Pakistani security forces for a second time in five days as Kabul and Islamabad engaged in a war of words over the porous frontier, officials said.

On the edge of the Afghan capital, more than 2,000 people, mostly villagers, demonstrated and chanted anti-Pakistan slogans to protest against the fighting. Relations between the fractious neighbours have become increasingly strained despite renewed efforts last month by US Secretary of State John Kerry to get them to work more closely on peace efforts in Afghanistan.




Afghanistan and Pakistan are in dispute over a site where Pakistan has tried to construct a gate on what Afghan officials say is Afghan territory. Clashes last Wednesday in the same spot killed an Afghan guard and wounded two Pakistanis. The border is unmarked in places and a key battleground in the fight against Taliban violence plaguing both countries. “Today the Pakistanis returned to the construction site and said they will rebuild the installations,” said Afghan Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi.

“Our border police told them not to do so. The Pakistanis fired at them and our police returned fire. The fighting lasted for two hours before the Pakistanis requested a ceasefire,” the spokesman added. He told AFP the clashes had since stopped and the Pakistani border guards had left the site of the construction. Pakistani officials blamed Afghans for starting the clashes. “Afghan troops opened unprovoked fire from across the border at our post... They fired mortars and automatic weapons,” one Pakistan official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

“Our troops responded with retaliatory fire. There have not been reports of any casualties so far. The exchange of fire continues at intervals,” a second official said, also on condition of anonymity. On Saturday Afghan President Hamid Karzai said the cross-border clashes could be an attempt by Islamabad to put pressure on Kabul to accept the “Durand Line”, the disputed border which Afghans do not accept.

Meanwhile, an ISAF spokesman said the recent issues between Afghanistan and Pakistan over the border could be solved via regular meetings of tripartite commission of Afghanistan, Pakistan and ISAF. “If anything happened in border region we meet in this so-called tri-partite commission on a regular bases on different levels and in these meetings we discuss what was going on.

What was the assessment of the Afghan side and what was the assessment of the Pakistani side. So we exchange views we assess the situation that how we can together deescalate and how we can together improve the security situation in the border area,” the NATO-led ISAF spokesman Brigadier General Gunter Katz told a weekly press briefing. agencies


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