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Pakistan security forces and Taliban clashes in Paktia over Durand Line

KABUL: Amid border tension between Pakistan and Afghanistan over the Durand line, spokesperson of the Taliban has said that fresh clashes between the security forces of the two countries have been reported in Paktia province, as per local media.
Bilal Karimi, the deputy spokesman of the Taliban said as quoted by Tolo News. The clashes took place in the Dand Patan area of the province, as per the Afghan media outlet.
Writing on social media as per Tolo News, Karimi said that military facilities should not be built close to the Durand Line “in principle,” and, added that on Tuesday the Pakistani military sought to build an outpost there.
Meanwhile, footage of the Taliban forces driving into Pakistan’s side of the Durand line surfaced on social media. Taliban members went to talk to the Pakistani side but the other side opened fire which caused casualties, Karimi claim, as per Tolo News.
While the media affairs wing of the Pakistan military (ISPR) after the incident on Tuesday said that three Pakistani soldiers were killed in firing by “terrorists from inside Afghanistan” in the general area of Kharlachi, Kurram tribal district.

Pakistani troops deployed at the Durand Line.

“Pakistan strongly condemns the use of Afghan soil by terrorists for activities against Pakistan and expects that Afghan government will not allow conduct of such activities in future,” the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) had said, as per the Pakistani publication.
Till May 1 this year, there have been around 40 clashes along the Durand Line most of which pertain to the border dispute. More than 40 people died when rockets were fired from Pakistan Air Force (PAF) helicopters in Kunar, Khost, Paktika and other bordering provinces on April 16, 2022.
The Durand Line passes through the present-day Pakistani provinces of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (NWFP), Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and Balochistan. It also includes 10 provinces in Afghanistan. Disputed in the context of the struggle for the Pashtun homeland, the Durand Line has of late become the cause of heightened border tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Amnesty calls for UN resolution on Afghan human rights

Amnesty International on Saturday called for a UN resolution on Afghan human rights following reports of violations by the Taliban. They requested in a letter to the Permanent Representatives of Member and Observer States of the UN Human Rights Council that a resolution be issued in support of the human rights situation in Afghanistan, reported Tolo News. “We are writing to call on you to support a strong resolution on the human rights situation in Afghanistan. The situation in Afghanistan is extremely worrying as the country faces an increasingly intertwined spate of crimes under international law, gross human rights violations and a deteriorating humanitarian crisis. The Taliban have been grossly and systematically violating women`s rights since their takeover on 15 August 2021,” read the letter.

Afghan Border Police personnel keep watch during a continuing dispute between Pakistani and Afghan border forces near the Durand line.

“We ask the UN Human Rights Council to establish an impartial, independent international mechanism to address the severe violations of human rights in Afghanistan. With the Taliban’s arrival, we can clearly see that internal monitoring systems have been destroyed,” said Amnesty International Researcher Zaman Sultani.
According to the letter, violence against women has increased due to the closing of human rights support institutions, reported Tolo News.
“They have imposed a ban on girls beyond grade six from attending schools and dismantled institutions such as Ministry of Women’s Affairs (MoWA), Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) and other structures that were addressing women’s human rights,” the letter reads.
“We ask the international community, human rights organizations, and women’s rights advocates to pay attention to the women of Afghanistan; human rights organizations in Afghanistan should be active and put pressure on the current government,” said Laila Basim, a women’s rights defender.

Taliban spokesman Bilal Karimi

Amnesty International added in the letter that the humanitarian situation in Afghanistan has been worsening due to cuts in international development assistance and the freezing of Afghan assets, reported Tolo News.
“The humanitarian situation has been worsening due to cuts in international development assistance, freezes of Afghanistan assets, challenges in transferring humanitarian aid and severance from international market because of sanctions. This situation is exacerbated by the increasing drought and flash floods due to climate change. The number of internally displaced people due to conflict and climate changes remained high and forced return of Afghan refugees from other countries in the region continued unabated,” the letter further stated.
Amnesty International asked the United Nations to support the Special Rapporteur of the United Nations Human Rights Council to investigate the cases of human rights violations in Afghanistan.
“Support the mandate of the Special Rapporteur and enhance the Special Rapporteur’s capacity to ‘seek, receive, examine and act on’ human rights information as mandated by UN Human Rights Council resolution 48/1. To this end, adequate additional resources, should be provided to the Special Rapporteur,” the letter reads.

“Women in Afghanistan are facing numerous challenges, schools are closed, those women who were working are staying at home, and on top of all these problems, protest avenues are closed to all women; women are detained, are suppressed, and are imprisoned,” said Navida Khorasani, women’s rights activist.
Previously, Michelle Bachelet, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, at the 50th Session of the Human Rights Council, said the people of Afghanistan are experiencing some of the “darkest moments of a generation.”
“The people of Afghanistan are experiencing some of the darkest moments of a generation. In the wake of years of conflict, and since the takeover by the Taliban in August last year, the country has been plunged into a deep economic, social, humanitarian and human rights crisis,” she said.
Since the Taliban seized power in Kabul last year, the human rights situation has been exacerbated by a nationwide economic, financial and humanitarian crisis of unprecedented scale.
The Taliban dismantled the system to respond to gender-based violence, created new barriers to women accessing health care, blocked women’s aid workers from doing their jobs, and attacked women’s rights protesters.
With the US troops’ withdrawal from the country, large-scale violence has been unleashed creating political uncertainty in different parts of the country.
At least 59 per cent of the population is now in need of humanitarian assistance – an increase of 6 million people compared with the beginning of 2021, according to UNAMA. (ANI)