Home Neighbours Afghanistan Pakistan-Afghanistan Border Clashes Subside As Thousands Displaced

Pakistan-Afghanistan Border Clashes Subside As Thousands Displaced

The conflict started on Monday, the first working day of Ramadan, when food imports from Pakistan usually peak in Afghanistan.
People stand next to parked trucks loaded with supplies at the Torkham border crossing following the closure of the border crossing between Pakistan and Afghanistan, March 3, 2025. REUTERS/Shahid Shinwari/File Photo

Overnight clashes between the forces of Pakistan and Afghanistan at a key border crossing displaced thousands, but the situation had stabilised by Tuesday morning, according to residents and officials.

The conflict started on Monday, the first working day of Ramadan, when food imports from Pakistan usually peak in Afghanistan.

Thousands Flee

Around 15,000 local residents fled to Landi Kotal due to the Afghanistan-Pakistan border clashes, an official said. Afghan border guards had opened fire without warning, targeting government buildings and civilians, and causing widespread panic.

“The tensions between the two countries and continuous closure of the border has been causing multiple problems to the people of the border area. People are very poor and dependent on their businesses related to the border,” Ali Shinwari, who lives in the border town, told Reuters.

Relatives and tribesmen in a nearby town have been hosting dozens of relatives since the border closure, he added.

Border Crossing Shut

The Torkham crossing has been shut since February 21 due to a dispute over the construction of a border-area outpost by Afghanistan, Pakistani officials said on condition of anonymity.


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Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediately respond to a request for a comment.

Taliban Reports Casualties

The Taliban-run Afghan Interior Ministry said on Monday one Taliban fighter was killed and two injured, while Pakistani security officials reported that members of their forces had also been wounded.

The Torkham crossing is the main transit artery for travellers and goods between Pakistan and landlocked Afghanistan. Trade between the countries was worth over $1.6 billion in 2024, according to Pakistan’s foreign office.

The closure has stranded 5,000 trucks filled with essential goods and caused at least $15 million in losses, said Yousaf Afridi, president of the Chamber of Commerce and Industries for Pakistan’s Khyber district where the Torkham crossing is located.

(With inputs from Reuters)