Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Pakistan says 4 soldiers killed in ambush by Afghan militants along border

Pakistan says 4 soldiers killed in ambush by Afghan militants along border

FOUR Pakistani soldiers were killed and six others were wounded along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border on Wednesday (5) in an ambush by militants from Afghanistan, Pakistan's military said, as the soldiers were doing controversial border fencing work.

The soldiers were working on fencing along the border in Zhob district, an area of Pakistan's Balochistan province, the military said in a statement. Zhob sits across from Afghanistan's eastern Paktika province.


Officials in Afghanistan did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

Pakistan has said it is constructing a fence along its 2,500 km (1,500 mile) frontier with Afghanistan to secure the area, despite Kabul’s protests that the barrier would divide families and friends along the Pashtun tribal belt straddling the colonial-era Durand Line drawn up by the British in 1893.

Security forces from the two countries occasionally exchange fire along the disputed border. In July 2020, at least 22 people were killed as crowds waited to enter Afghanistan from Pakistan at a border crossing, with both Pakistani and Afghan soldiers exchanging fire.

In April, a car bomb at a luxury hotel in the city of Quetta, the provincial capital of Balochistan, killed four people, in an attack later claimed by the Pakistani Taliban. China's ambassador to Pakistan was staying at the hotel, but was not present during the attack.

More For You

UK drafts powers to shoot down drones over military bases

Defence secretary John Healey leaves number 10 Downing Street after attending the weekly cabinet meeting on October 14, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)

UK drafts powers to shoot down drones over military bases

BRITAIN is drafting new powers to allow troops to shoot down unidentified drones threatening its military bases, defence secretary John Healey will announce on Monday (20).

Healey is due to unveil measures in response to what is widely seen as a growing threat posed by Russia.

Keep ReadingShow less