‘Now they only deport’: Afghans trapped in Pakistan arrested and sent back after ‘open war’ breaks out

Zahra Nader and Freshta Ghani for Zan Times

The Guardian

Tue 3 Mar 2026 02.00 EST

Journalists and activists who fled Taliban rule are living in fear as Pakistani police hunt and deport refugees after escalating cross-border clashes

The Afghan journalist, who fled the Taliban in October 2024, had already been stopped from boarding two days earlier, on 26 February. Since they were flying with a tourist visa to a country in Africa, they had booked a flight from Karachi with a return leg that they did not plan to use. But the Pakistani officials at the airport refused to let them board.

This time, they had booked flights with a return leg to Kabul. But again, officials from Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency refused to let the family board.

“The officers told us to go back to Afghanistan and fly wherever we want to from there. They said we cannot fly to our destination from Pakistan.”

Within hours, she and her family would also be turned away from a hotel because of their Afghan passports.

Alma’s ordeal is unfolding as Pakistan declares itself in “open war” with Afghanistan after escalating cross-border strikes last month on Tehreek-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militants, also known as the Pakistan Taliban, which Islamabad accuses Kabul of supporting.

Afghan refugees say the developments have triggered a sharp increase in police raids, arrests and deportations across major cities.

For the millions of Afghans living in Pakistan – many of them journalists, activists or former government officials who fled Taliban rule – the rising tension is translating into fear at their doorsteps.

Richard Bennett, UN special rapporteur on human rights in Afghanistan, says returning to their country will put them at “real risk of violent retaliatory attacks”.

Months of clashes have flared up since Thursday, when Afghanistan launched attacks along the frontier and Pakistani forces hit back across the border and with airstrikes on seven camps of the TTP.

After being not being allowed to board their flight on 28 February, Alma took a taxi to a nearby hotel. Staff allowed them in but after they saw their Afghan passports, they were ordered to leave.

“The employee opened the door and said you have one second to empty the room. When we asked for a reason, he replied, ‘It is an order from high up; I am just an employee who is tasked with implementing it.’”

Alma is a journalist with one of Afghanistan’s exiled media groups, covering the Taliban’s human rights violations. If she were to be deported to Afghanistan, she says, her work would put her life at risk.

“On Sunday, I woke up to the news of war in Iran and the protest in Karachi. For a few minutes I felt I was suffocating, couldn’t breathe and felt this is the end,” she says.

A friend in the capital, Islamabad, has offered her shelter, but she fears arrest at any moment. “I am an Afghan woman journalist with nowhere to go,” she says.

Other refugees living in Pakistan have described the police searching for and arresting Afghans.

In the city of Quetta, about 60 miles (100km) from the Afghan border, another Afghan woman, Leila*, describes the night she heard pounding knocks echoing through her building.

Her neighbour – an Afghan woman studying on a valid visa – had already seen her husband arrested two days earlier. When loud banging began at her door late at night on Friday, Leila suspected what was happening.

“At that moment, I said to myself that it must be the police, because my friend didn’t answer my message. I sat silently in my room. My mother was asleep. Since coming to Pakistan, I have been taking pills because of the intense stress; my heart was in severe pain and I was crying.”

Leila says three neighbours were arrested that night, including two with valid visas. “My friend later messaged that they were taken to the camp. After that, communication was cut off.

“Pakistani police used to take money and then let people go,” she says. “But now they only deport.”

Across Karachi, Islamabad, Quetta and Peshawar, Afghans report new checkpoints and house-to-house searches.

Abdul*, an investigative journalist who fled Taliban rule after previously being deported from Iran, arrived in Pakistan in July 2025. His two-month visa was not renewed.

Since September, he has been arrested twice. “The first time, I paid 15,000 Pakistani rupees [£40]. The second time, I paid 20,000,” he says.

Abdul and his family rent a home under another person’s name. When police knock, a neighbour with valid papers answers. “When the police search house to house, we often hide outside,” he says. “That is how the police arrested me twice on the street.”

In a Facebook group of more than 44,000 Afghan refugees, posts since 26 February focus on sounding alarms about the areas the police are searching, checkpoints and safe areas.

“Tonight, after 12am, the police raided our neighbourhood and arrested all the men … it is not clear where they were taken,” one Facebook post says. “The situation is very bad,” says another. “Everyone should be ready to go back to Afghanistan.”

On 27 February, the journalist Zarghona Akbari said police arrested her and her children despite her valid visa. “Tonight they came again,” she says in a voice message on Facebook asking fellow journalists for help. “Right now, they are transferring us to the camp from the police station.”

* Names changed to protect their identities

Zahra Nader and Freshta Ghani are reporters at Zan Times

‘Now they only deport’: Afghans trapped in Pakistan arrested and sent back after ‘open war’ breaks out
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Afghanistan ranks 181st out of 181 countries in global women’s index

Khaama Press

Afghanistan ranked 181st out of 181 countries in the latest global Women, Peace and Security Index, underscoring worsening conditions for women nationwide.

Denmark ranked first among 181 countries assessed in the Women, Peace and Security Index, while Afghanistan placed last, according to the latest report by the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security.

The index evaluates countries across 13 indicators measuring women’s inclusion, justice and security, and found that Afghanistan once again ranked 181st with the worst overall performance for women.

Among the 10 lowest-ranked countries, including Afghanistan, one in five women reported experiencing intimate partner violence, underscoring persistent abuse in fragile and conflict-affected states.

Countries such as South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Syria, the Central African Republic and Yemen ranked slightly above Afghanistan but remained near the bottom of the global list.

In these countries, including Afghanistan, more than half of women surveyed said they did not feel safe in their communities, reflecting widespread insecurity and instability.

The report found that nearly three in four women in the lowest-performing states live close to armed conflict, while about one in six people globally are exposed to conflict conditions.

In 2024, more than 676 million women worldwide were living near conflict zones, marking a 74% increase compared to 2010 and the highest number ever recorded.

The study noted that setbacks in women’s rights have coincided with a worrying rise in armed conflict and political violence, disproportionately affecting women and vulnerable groups.

Countries at the bottom of the index, including Afghanistan, also performed poorly in access to justice, with average maternal mortality rates reaching 226 deaths per 100,000 live births, worse than the global average.

The report added that targeted political violence against women in these countries is three times higher than the global average, highlighting the severe risks faced by women in conflict-affected environments.

Afghanistan ranks 181st out of 181 countries in global women’s index
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Pakistan says its forces killed 67 Afghan troops in cross-border clashes. Kabul rejects the claim

By MUNIR AHMED and ABDUL QAHAR AFGHAN

Associated Press

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Afghan forces attacked Pakistani military positions along the border early on Tuesday, triggering intense clashes that left 67 Afghan troops and one Pakistani soldier dead, officials in Islamabad said as cross-border fighting between the two countries entered its fifth day.

The Taliban defense ministry in Kabul, the Afghan capital, rejected Pakistan’s claim. A ministry spokesman said Afghan forces in the past 24 hours repelled Pakistani attacks, destroying about a dozen military posts and killing four Pakistani soldiers.

The latest Afghan-Pakistan escalation erupted last week with Afghanistan launching attacks on Thursday in retaliation for Pakistani airstrikes the previous weekend. Since then, Pakistan has carried out operations along the border and declared it was in an “open war” with Afghanistan, alarming the international community.

On Tuesday, Pakistan said Afghan forces attacked Pakistan’s military in two sections of the two countries’ border.

It said 16 locations were attacked along the southern part of the border, in the southwestern districts of Qilla Saifullah, Nushki and Chaman in Pakistan’s Balochistan province.Pakistani troops killed 27 members of the Afghan forces there and “successfully repelled these multiple attacks,” Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said.

Tarar said on X that another wave of attacks hit 25 locations along the northern part of the border, in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where Pakistani troops killed 40 members of the Afghan security forces. The spokesman did not say where the Pakistani soldier was killed.

In Kabul, defense ministry spokesman Enayatullah Khawarazmi slammed the Islamabad statements as “baseless.”

The border area — where militant groups, including al-Qaida and the Islamic State group, are also active — is not accessible to the media and the Associated Press could not independently confirm any casualty reports.

In past escalations and cross-border exchanges of fire, Pakistan and Afghanistan have both repeatedly claimed to inflicting heavy losses on the other side.

In the five days of fighting, Tarar said Pakistani forces have so far killed 464 Afghan security force members and injured 665. Khawarazmi said in a statement that so far, 28 Afghan soldiers have died and 42 others have been wounded in the fighting.

Islamabad has long accused Kabul of providing a safe haven to militants fighting the Pakistani government — charges that Afghanistan’s Taliban government denies.

Khawarazmi reiterated that stand on Tuesday. “I repeat once again that we will not allow any person or group to use our territory against other countries,” he said.

Separately, Hamdullah Fitrat, the Afghan government’s deputy spokesman, accused Pakistan of violating Afghan airspace and targeting homes, mosques, religious schools or madrasas and other civilian targets in Kabul, Laghman, Nangarhar, Paktia, Kandahar and Kunar provinces, as well as targeting refugee camps.

He said these attacks have resulted in the death of 110 civilians, including 65 women and children.

Fitrat said the Taliban government of Afghanistan considers its “legitimate right” to protect their people and will “fight against the enemy … until this aggression is stopped.”

Meanwhile, the U.N. mission in Kabul called for an immediate halt to the fighting, warning that the conflict is worsening Afghanistan’s dire humanitarian situation. According to its preliminary figures, since last Thursday, at least 42 civilians have been killed and 104 injured, including women and children.

On Monday, Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari defended the ongoing fighting with Afghanistan, saying Islamabad had tried all forms of diplomacy before targeting militants operating from Afghan territory.

He asked Kabul to disarm groups responsible for attacks in Pakistan.

Pakistan has experienced a surge in violence in recent months, which it blames on the outlawed Pakistani Taliban — known as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan or TTP. Islamabad says the TTP operates from Afghan territory and have the protection of Afghanistan’s Taliban government. Kabul denies the accusations.

The latest fighting has ended a ceasefire brokered by Qatar and Turkey in October. Talks in Istanbul failed to produce a permanent agreement, and Pakistan has said that operations will continue until Afghanistan takes verifiable steps to rein in the TTP and other militants.

The Pakistani Taliban are a separate group but allied with the Afghan Taliban and since the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan in August 2021, the TTP has become emboldened and escalated its attacks in Pakistan.

Abdul Qahar Afghan reported from Kabul, Afghanistan. Associated Press writer Riaz Khan in Peshawar, Pakistan, contributed to this report.

Pakistan says its forces killed 67 Afghan troops in cross-border clashes. Kabul rejects the claim
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WFP warns of deepening crisis in Afghanistan as insecurity flares on eastern, southern and western border

This is a summary of what was said by John Aylieff, WFP Afghanistan Representative and Country Director (speaking from Bangkok via Zoom) – to whom quoted text may be attributed – at today’s press briefing at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.

GENEVA – Afghanistan is seeing an escalation of insecurity on its borders— increased fighting on the eastern and southern frontier with Pakistan, and ongoing violence in Iran. This renewed fighting is putting immense pressure on communities already vulnerable and worn down by years of crisis, conflict and chaos.

Let me begin with the eastern and southern border.

Afghanistan shares an approximately 2,400kilometre border with Pakistan, touching nearly one third of its provinces. Since 26 February, violence has escalated across the Durand Line, triggering displacement of approximately 20,000 families across the Eastern, Southeastern and Southern regions. Cross border violence and air and ground strikes have affected more than 30 districts in Nangarhar, Nuristan, Kunar, Laghman, Paktika, Paktya, Khost, Kandahar, Helmand provinces.

Across these provinces, WFP has been forced to temporarily suspend emergency, social protection, school feeding and livelihood activities. Approximately 160,000 people have been impacted by the suspension of emergency food distributions.

You may recall the earthquake that struck eastern Afghanistan on 31 August. Communities in mountainous Kunar and Nangarhar provinces—already among the most vulnerable—were hardest hit, losing family members, homes and livelihoods. Today, those very same communities are once again on the front line, now facing the escalation of conflict with Pakistan.

The affected districts were already facing severe food insecurity, with more than half in  Emergency levels of hunger, while four of the affected provinces are experiencing critical levels of acute malnutrition – leaving families in an increasingly dire situation.

On the other side of the country, on Afghanistan’s western border, violence in Iran is sparking fears of a surge in returnees. We witnessed a similar surge in returns during increased fighting in June 2025. For many, coming back to Afghanistan means not only facing poverty, unemployment and hunger but also renewed instability.

Saeed Azeez, a 36-year-old father of four, returned from Iran only months ago, where he lived on a modest factory wage – but able to feed his family. Back in Afghanistan, he found himself with no home, no work and some days nothing more than bread to eat. Injured and unable to work, and with restrictions preventing his wife from working, his family now survives on WFP rations. As Saeed put it, during Ramadan: “We barely have any food to break our fast.” His story illustrates how returnees—already among the most vulnerable—are seeing renewed instability, poverty and hunger.

In 2025, WFP supported over half a million returnees at border points with Iran and Pakistan. Assistance included cash, fortified biscuits and nutritious food products for women and children.

Afghanistan already saw an influx of more than 2.5 million returnees from Iran and Pakistan in 2025. Even before the latest escalation, projections estimated a similar influx in 2026—but renewed fighting may drive those numbers even higher, placing unbearable strain on a woefully underfunded humanitarian response.

Afghanistan remains one of the world’s most severe hunger crises with one in three Afghans—17.4 million people in urgent need of food assistance. Child malnutrition has also reached worrying levels, with 3.7 million children projected to need treatment in 2026.

With a new crisis in the making and the current funding outlook, WFP will not be able to reach families fleeing Iran and Pakistan and those internally displaced by the cross- border conflict in Afghanistan.

For our winter response this year, WFP was only able to provide food assistance to a fraction of those in need. WFP warns that by April 2026 funding for emergency operations will run out, putting millions at risk of losing critical support.

Our funding need for the next six months stands at US$313 million. WFP urges the international community to honor their commitment and not abandon Afghanistan in its hour of greatest need.

WFP warns of deepening crisis in Afghanistan as insecurity flares on eastern, southern and western border
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Former U.S. Special Envoy Condemns Pakistan’s Attacks on Afghanistan

Khalilzad also stressed that the best way to resolve tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan is through dialogue and diplomacy.

The former U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan Reconciliation has condemned Pakistan’s attacks on Afghan territory, describing Pakistan as “guilty” in this regard.

Zalmay Khalilzad said in an interview that the Islamic Emirate is prepared to reach an agreement with Pakistan to prevent the use of the two countries’ territories against one another.

Khalilzad also stressed that the best way to resolve tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan is through dialogue and diplomacy.

“I condemn their attack on Afghanistan,” Khalilzad said. “I was in Kabul a few weeks ago and met with Taliban officials. In my view, the Taliban are ready to reach an agreement with Pakistan so that neither Afghanistan’s territory is used against Pakistan nor Pakistan’s territory against Afghanistan.”

The former U.S. envoy further insisted that Pakistan is seeking to pressure Afghanistan and does not want the current challenges to be resolved through dialogue.

According to Khalilzad, there is a specific circle within Pakistan’s current leadership that favors applying pressure on Afghanistan and has unreasonable demands.

Political analyst Mohammad Omid Janzada stated: “The end of every war is negotiation and dialogue. Both sides should try to reach the conclusion that existing issues must be resolved through mutual understanding. Other countries such as Russia and China can also play a role.”

Khalilzad’s emphasis on a diplomatic solution to tensions between Kabul and Islamabad comes as military tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan have sharply escalated in recent days, and the future of bilateral relations remains uncertain.

Former U.S. Special Envoy Condemns Pakistan’s Attacks on Afghanistan
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UN Security Council to Hold Meeting on Afghanistan Next Week

The council said that its members will also address the recent military tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The United Nations Security Council is scheduled to hold a meeting on Afghanistan next week.

In a statement, the council said that in addition to discussing the situation in Afghanistan, its members will also address the recent military tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Part of the UN Security Council’s statement reads: “Members are also likely to follow the heightened tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan, which resulted in exchanges of fire in the past week.”

Although the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has not recently commented on the holding of this meeting, earlier the acting foreign minister of the Islamic Emirate, in a telephone conversation with Rosemary DiCarlo, the UN Under-Secretary-General, called for an investigation into Pakistan’s attacks on civilian areas of Afghanistan.

Naqibullah Noori, a university professor, said: “We expect the Security Council, instead of raising repetitive and unfounded concerns about Afghanistan and its security, to address the issue of Pakistan’s aggression against our country’s territory and the targeting of civilians. Of course, if this body is truly independent.”

In addition to this meeting, the UN Security Council is also expected to hold another session on the 17th of the current month, focusing on Afghanistan and the UNAMA mission.

UN Security Council to Hold Meeting on Afghanistan Next Week
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Afghanistan says it thwarted Pakistan airstrikes on Bagram airbase

Guardian staff and agencies

Sun 1 Mar 2026

Afghanistan has said it had thwarted Pakistan’s attempted airstrikes on Bagram airbase, the former US military base north of Kabul, as cross-border fighting between the two countries stretched into a fourth day.

Months of clashes have flared up again since Thursday, when Afghanistan launched attacks along the frontier and Pakistani forces hit back on the border and from the skies. Pakistan has declared it is in “open war” with Afghanistan.

On Sunday, the police headquarters of Parwan province, where Bagram is located, said in a statement that several Pakistani military jets entered Afghan airspace “and attempted to bomb Bagram airbase” at about 5am.

The statement said Afghan forces responded with “anti-aircraft and missile defence systems” and had managed to thwart the attack. There was no immediate response to the claim from Pakistan.

Diplomatic efforts have failed to secure a truce, with Saudi Arabia and Qatar among those engaged in efforts to halt the fighting.

The conflict has alarmed the international community, particularly as the area is one where other militant groups, including al-Qaida and Islamic State, still have a presence and have been trying to resurface.

Islamabad has accused Afghanistan of failing to act against militant groups that have been carrying out attacks in Pakistan, which the Taliban government has rejected.

Many attacks have been claimed by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a militant group that has stepped up assaults in Pakistan since 2021, the year the Taliban authorities returned to power in Kabul.

Pakistan acknowledged bombing key cities on Friday – including Kabul and Kandahar, which is home to Afghanistan’s supreme leader.

There was an increased presence of security forces in Kabul on Sunday, with more checkpoints than usual in the city centre.

The Taliban government’s deputy spokesperson, Hamdullah Fitrat, said Pakistani fire had killed 36 civilians across multiple provinces since Thursday, which Islamabad has not commented on.Multiple residents in Afghanistan’s Khost and Nangarhar provinces told AFP that the two sides were engaged in sporadic clashes on Sunday afternoon.

At Torkham border crossing – a key gateway for Afghans returning from Pakistan – overnight fighting was reported by the Nangarhar province information department.

The spokesperson for a military unit reported heavy fighting overnight in Paktia province. Afghan officials said Thursday’s border offensive was a response to earlier airstrikes that killed civilians, which Pakistan said targeted militants.

This week’s escalation marked the first time that Pakistan has focused its airstrikes on Afghan government facilities, analysts noted, a stark change from previous operations that it said targeted militants.

Pakistan’s information minister, Attaullah Tarar, said 46 locations across Afghanistan had been hit by airstrikes since its operation began. Pakistan has killed 415 Afghan soldiers, the minister said. Islamabad said earlier that 12 of its soldiers had been killed.

Fitrat said more than 80 Pakistani soldiers were killed and 27 military posts captured. The Afghan government earlier put the death toll among its troops at 13.

Casualty claims from both sides are difficult to verify independently.

Associated Press and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

Afghanistan says it thwarted Pakistan airstrikes on Bagram airbase
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Hundreds of Afghan Migrants Arrested in Pakistan Amid Rising Tensions

Khaama Press

Pakistani media outlets have reported that police have detained hundreds of Afghan migrants following escalating tensions and clashes with the Taliban.

According to a report by Dawn, a local court in Peshawar on Sunday sent hundreds of Afghan nationals into judicial custody. The detainees had been arrested a day earlier from different parts of the city.

The newspaper described chaotic scenes at the multi-story judicial complex located along Khyber Road, where police transported groups of detained Afghans from various precincts throughout the morning.

Due to the high number of detainees, accommodating all of them within the court premises proved difficult, the report added.

The Peshawar court also ordered the release of hundreds of Afghan nationals who possessed valid visas or other legal residency documents, directing authorities to free them from police custody.

In a separate development, police in Kohat district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa arrested 174 Afghan asylum seekers and transferred them to prison after registering cases against them.

Pakistan has hosted millions of Afghan refugees for decades, particularly since the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 and subsequent conflicts. However, relations have grown increasingly strained in recent years over security concerns and cross-border militancy.

Islamabad has repeatedly accused the Taliban-led authorities in Kabul of failing to curb militant activities targeting Pakistan, prompting stricter immigration enforcement and deportation campaigns against undocumented Afghans.

Authorities have intensified crackdowns on undocumented Afghan migrants following renewed tensions with the Taliban. Reports indicate that house-to-house searches are being conducted in several cities, leading to further arrests and detentions.

Hundreds of Afghan Migrants Arrested in Pakistan Amid Rising Tensions
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Naeem Wardak Claims Fighters Crossed Durand Line Into Pakistan, Clashes Ongoing

Khaama Press

Mohammad Naeem Wardak, the Taliban’s deputy minister for finance and administration at the foreign ministry, claimed that Taliban forces have crossed the Durand Line and are engaged in “intense fighting” inside Pakistani territory. He made the statement in a post on X.

Wardak alleged that the clashes are currently taking place at Pakistani military bases across the border. He further claimed that if the conflict continues and Taliban forces choose to escalate, they could make significant advances inside Pakistan.

Pakistani authorities have not officially responded to Wardak’s claims. The statements come as cross-border fighting and reported Pakistani airstrikes inside Afghanistan enter a fourth consecutive day.

According to reports, Pakistani fighter jets and drones have targeted multiple locations, including Kabul, Taliban military centers, and Bagram Airfield. The scale of damage has not been independently verified.

The Taliban claim that 32 Pakistani soldiers were killed during Saturday night clashes and that several border posts were seized. However, Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said Pakistani forces struck 46 targets inside Afghanistan, killing 415 Taliban members and wounding 580 others.

Tarar also claimed that 182 Taliban posts were destroyed and 31 were captured by Pakistani forces, along with the destruction of 185 tanks and military vehicles. These figures remain unverified by independent sources.

Border tensions between Pakistan and the Taliban-led Afghanistan administration have escalated sharply in recent days, with both sides accusing each other of aggression and cross-border attacks.

The Durand Line has long been a sensitive and disputed boundary, contributing to recurring security clashes between the two neighbors.

Conflicting claims and casualty figures have circulated widely on social media platforms, though independent confirmation of battlefield developments remains limited.

Naeem Wardak Claims Fighters Crossed Durand Line Into Pakistan, Clashes Ongoing
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Four Pakistani Military Bases Seized in Cross-Border Clashes: Defense Ministry

Four Pakistani military bases were reportedly seized during heavy cross-border fighting, according to official claims released Sunday.

Afghanistan’s Taliban defense ministry has claimed that its forces captured four Pakistani military bases following retaliatory attacks against Pakistani troops. The statement was issued Sunday by Taliban defense spokesperson Enayatullah Khwarazmi.

According to the ministry, 32 Pakistani soldiers were killed during the operation, reportedly through the use of landmines. The Taliban also claimed to have shot down two Pakistani drones during the clashes.

The reported attacks allegedly took place in Nangarhar, Khost, Kandahar, and Paktia provinces. Pakistani security officials have not yet commented on the claims.

The Taliban further confirmed that Pakistani aircraft conducted patrol flights over Kabul overnight. Local sources also reported explosions and gunfire in parts of the capital.

Additional reports suggest that Pakistani aircraft bombed Bagram Airfield during the night, though independent verification of these claims remains limited.

Tensions between the Taliban-led Afghan authorities and Pakistan have escalated in recent months, with both sides accusing each other of cross-border attacks and harboring militant groups.

Unverified videos circulating on social media appear to show flashes and aircraft activity over Kabul, but official confirmation from Pakistani authorities is still pending.

Four Pakistani Military Bases Seized in Cross-Border Clashes: Defense Ministry
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