Cross-border blasts raise tensions


Deadly aftermath: Taliban security personnel and residents searching for victims after an overnight Pakistan airstrike hit a residential area at the Girdi Kas village in the Bihsud district. — AFP

The government said it carried out strikes along the border with Afghanistan, targeting hideouts of Pakistani militants it blames for recent attacks inside the country.

Islamabad did not say in precisely which areas the strikes were carried out or provide other details.

In Kabul, Afghan government spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid yesterday said Pakistan carried out strikes inside Afghanistan.

In a post on X, Mujahid said the strikes targeted civilians in Nangarhar and Paktika provinces, killing and wounding dozens of people, including women and children.

Mujahid accused Pakistan’s military of carrying out the strikes to compensate for what he described as security weaknesses inside the country.

In comments before dawn yesterday, Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar wrote on X that the military conducted what he described as “intelligence-­based, selective operations” against seven camps belonging to the Pakistani Taliban, also known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, and its affiliates.

He said an affiliate of the Islamic State group was also targeted in the border region.

In October, Pakistan also conducted strikes deep inside Afghanistan to target militant hideouts.

Tarar said Pakistan “has always strived to maintain peace and stability in the region,” but added that the safety and security of Pakistani citizens remained a top priority.

The latest development came days after a suicide bomber, backed by gunmen, rammed an explosives-laden vehicle into the wall of a security post in the Bajaur district in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, which borders Afghanistan.

The blast caused part of the compound to collapse, killing 11 soldiers and a child, and authorities later said the attacker was an Afghan national.

Hours before the latest border strikes, another suicide bomber targeted a security convoy in the nearby Pakistan’s Bannu district, killing two soldiers, including a lieutenant colonel.

After Saturday’s violence, Pakistan’s military had warned that it would not “exercise any restraint” and that operations against those responsible would continue “irrespective of their location”, language that suggested rising tensions between Islamabad and Kabul.

Tarar said Pakistan had “conclusive evidence” that the recent attacks, including a suicide bombing that targeted a syiah mosque in Islamabad and killed 31 worshippers earlier this month, were carried out by militants acting on the “behest of their Afghanistan-based leadership and handlers”.

He said Pakistan had repeatedly urged Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers to take verifiable steps to prevent militant groups from using Afghan territory to launch attacks in Pakistan, but alleged that no substantive action had been taken.

He said Pakistan urges the international community to press Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities to uphold their commitments under the Doha agreement not to allow their soil to be used against other countries. — AP

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