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News ID: 144525
Publish Date : 12 October 2025 - 21:50

Pakistan Closes Afghan Border After Taliban Claim Killing of 58 Soldiers

ISLAMABAD (Dispatches) -- Pakistan closed border crossings with Afghanistan on Sunday, officials said, following exchanges of fire between the forces of the two countries overnight in which Kabul claimed to have killed 58 Pakistani soldiers.
Afghan troops opened fire on Pakistani border posts late on Saturday, with the country’s ministry of defense saying this was in retaliation for Pakistani airstrikes in Afghanistan earlier in the week. Pakistan said that it had responded with gun and artillery fire.
Afghanistan said it had killed 58 Pakistani soldiers, but gave no details on how it knew of the casualty figures. It also said that 20 Afghan troops were killed or injured.
There was no immediate response from Pakistan. Pakistani security officials said they had inflicted casualties on Afghan force but gave no number. The accounts could not be independently verified.
Both nations claimed to have destroyed border posts of the other side. Pakistani security officials shared video footage, which they said showed Afghan posts being hit.
The exchange of fire was mostly over on Sunday morning, Pakistani security officials said. But in Pakistan’s Kurram area, intermittent gunfire continued, according to local officials and residents.
Afghanistan’s ministry of defense had previously said that their operation had finished at midnight local time.
Kabul said on Sunday that it had halted attacks at the request of Qatar and Saudi Arabia. The two Arab Persian Gulf nations had released statements of concern about the clashes.
The Taliban administration’s spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said Sunday that fighting was ongoing in some areas.
Islamabad accuses the Taliban administration of harboring militants who attack Pakistan, a charge that Kabul denies.
Pakistan’s two main border crossings with Afghanistan, at Torkham and Chaman, were closed on Sunday, local officials said. At least three minor crossings, at Kharlachi, Angoor Adda and Ghulam Khan, were also closed, local officials said.
There was no immediate comment from Kabul on the closing of the border. Landlocked Afghanistan has a 2,600-km (1,600-mile) -long border with Pakistan.
The Pakistani airstrikes, not officially acknowledged by Islamabad, had targeted the leader of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militant group in Kabul on Thursday, according to a Pakistani security official. It is unclear if he survived.
The TTP has been fighting to overthrow the Islamabad government and replace it with a strict takfiri-led system of governance. Mujahid on Sunday denied that TTP fighters were allowed to operate from Afghan soil.