1. Women
  2. WORLD HEADLINES

Pakistan troops die in Afghan clash

Pakistan troops die in Afghan clash

At least 10 Pakistani troops have been killed and nine wounded after a missile fired from Afghanistan hit their border post, officials have said.

The incident on Wednesday came after Pakistani paramilitary troops in the Mohmand tribal region clashed with Afghan forces in an area fought over by the two countries, Pakistani officials said.
"Sometime after midnight a missile fired from the Afghan side struck our post, resulting in the martyrdom of at least 11 soldiers, including a commanding officer. Nine soldiers were wounded," a security official said.
"The injured and the dead bodies have been retrieved. The troops are still holding on to the post."
The Afghan army is understood to have entered the area in an attempt to secure the release of seven soldiers held by the Taliban in Pakistan.
But Pakistani officials said Afghan forces tried to capture parts of the Soran Dara area, which borders the Afghan province of Nangarhar and which Pakistan claims is its own territory.
"There is confusion over what happened," Kamal Hyder, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Islamabad, said.
"Officials have confirmed that Pakistani troops were killed … in an area where Americans and Afghans were conducting joint operations."
Another Al Jazeera correspondent based in Islamabad said that military sources had told him that a US spy plane was used in the air raid.
'Spy plane' spotted
Damagh Khan Mohmand, a local tribesman who witnessed the outbreak of fighting late on Tuesday, said the clashes lasted for four hours.
He said Afghan and foreign forces traded fire with both Pakistani tribesmen and troops.
Two aircraft then bombed several locations, hitting two Frontier Corps posts, Khan Mohmand said.
Ten Pakistani paramilitary troops died in the exchange of fire and air raid, a military official in northwestern Pakistan said.
Hyder said the incident was not the first attack on a Pakistani military post.
 
"A little over a month ago there was an attack at a post not far from Chopara checkpoint," he said.
"Al Jazeera sources in Kabul say that the Nato-led coalition is investigating. The coalition has not released any official statements; nor has the Pakistani military.
"There has been anger from the tribal groups, who have an armed group. They are now saying they will retaliate across the border for the strike."
Border dispute
A series of missile attacks have been attributed to US-led forces in Afghanistan in recent months.
More than a dozen people were killed in one such incident in the tribal region of Bajaur in May.
There have been several disputes over the 2,500 km Pakistan-Afghanistan border recently.
 Both countries, whose governments are both allies of the US in its so-called "war on terror", have also argued over how to tackle fighters loyal to the Taliban.
Foreign forces within the Nato-led coalition and the government in Kabul have alleged that Pakistan is not being tough enough on the opposition fighters.
Pakistan's new government entered peace talks with Taliban loyalists shortly after allies of Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's president, were beaten in recent elections.
PHOTO CAPTION
Afghan forces receive training and operational support from the US-led coalition [AFP]

Related Articles