Afghanistan and Pakistan agreed to hold follow-up talks in Qatar to define conditions and create a framework for lasting peace. The decision ends a week of deadly cross-border clashes that killed dozens of people. Both nations accepted an immediate ceasefire after discussions with Qatari mediators in Doha, according to Qatar’s Foreign Ministry.
Qatar confirmed that the agreement ended the deadliest confrontation between the two neighbours in years, which left dozens dead and hundreds injured. Both sides committed to creating mechanisms that strengthen peace and stability. They also promised to meet again in the coming days to secure the ceasefire’s endurance. Turkish mediators helped facilitate the negotiations and supported Qatar’s peace efforts.
Rising Tensions and Mutual Blame
Violence between the two neighbours escalated earlier this month, with each claiming to respond to the other’s aggression. Afghanistan denied hosting militants who attack border regions, rejecting Islamabad’s main accusation. Pakistan has faced growing militancy along its western frontier since 2021, when the Taliban regained power in Kabul.
These clashes have threatened regional stability as groups like the Islamic State and al-Qaeda attempt to rebuild their networks. On Friday, hours after a 48-hour truce expired, Pakistan launched cross-border strikes in Paktika province, targeting fighters from the Hafiz Gul Bahadur group. Islamabad said its attacks neutralised dozens of militants without civilian casualties.
Pakistani officials said the strikes responded to a suicide bombing at a security compound in Mir Ali, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the previous day. Taliban authorities, however, reported that the airstrikes killed at least 10 civilians, including women, children, and local cricket players competing nearby.
Political Fallout and Historical Disputes
The deaths prompted Afghanistan’s cricket board to boycott an upcoming tournament in Pakistan. The International Cricket Council said it felt “saddened and appalled” by the deaths of three young Afghan players. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid condemned Pakistan’s “repeated crimes” and accused it of violating Afghan sovereignty. He called the actions deliberate provocations meant to extend the conflict.
Pakistan’s army chief, Asim Munir, urged Afghanistan to choose “mutual security over perpetual violence and progress over hardline obscurantism.” Speaking at the Pakistan Military Academy, he demanded that the Taliban restrain proxies operating from Afghan territory.
The two nations share a 2,600-kilometre frontier known as the Durand Line. Afghanistan has never recognised it, viewing it as a colonial boundary forced on the country in 1893 that divided Pashtun tribes across both sides. Kabul instead recognises the 1947 borders, disputing much of Pakistan’s western land. These disagreements have fuelled decades of cross-border clashes and militant-led skirmishes over control and territory.

