NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
IranTensionsIsraelFebruaryDiplomaticTrumpSignificantTechnologyTimelineMilitaryCrisisStatesPolicyDigestFacesRegionalChineseCompanyTurkeyFridayChinaTradeDespiteNations
IranTensionsIsraelFebruaryDiplomaticTrumpSignificantTechnologyTimelineMilitaryCrisisStatesPolicyDigestFacesRegionalChineseCompanyTurkeyFridayChinaTradeDespiteNations
All Articles
Civilians caught in crossfire as Pakistan–Afghan border clashes grow
Euronews
Clustered Story
Published about 4 hours ago

Civilians caught in crossfire as Pakistan–Afghan border clashes grow

Euronews · Feb 27, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

Residents in Pakistan’s Bajaur district reported shells hitting civilian homes, with injured families taken to local hospitals as clashes spread across frontier areas.

Full Article

Updated: 27/02/2026 - 17:15 GMT+1 Residents in Pakistan’s Bajaur district reported shells hitting civilian homes, with injured families taken to local hospitals as clashes spread across frontier areas. Shelling struck homes and a mosque in communities along the Afghan frontier, injuring civilians including women and children, according to local residents. Taliban authorities confirmed that strikes had taken place but contested reported casualty figures while announcing counter operations near border positions. Both sides said they had inflicted military losses, as conflicting claims emerged amid rising tensions. At the core of the dispute, Pakistan accuses fighters from Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan of operating from Afghan territory, an allegation rejected by Kabul.Border crossings remain largely closed, disrupting trade routes and daily movement for residents on both sides. Diplomatic mediation efforts by regional actors have so far failed to ease tensions, leaving the neighbours facing one of their most serious confrontations in recent years.


Share this story

Read Original at Euronews

Related Articles

DW Newsabout 3 hours ago
Is Afghanistan-Pakistan conflict the 'new normal?'

The worst outbreak of fighting in decades comes as Pakistan accuses the Taliban of harboring militant groups. Without a clear path towards reconciliation, the threat of protracted violence looms.

France 24about 4 hours ago
Pakistan declares 'open war' against Afghanistan

#Pakistan conducted airstrikes in Kabul and three other Afghan provinces overnight between Thursday and Friday, authorities in #Afghanistan said, as the former's defence minister said that the countries were now in "open war".

France 24about 4 hours ago
Civilians flee fighting after Pakistan bombs Afghan cities

After an Afghan cross-border attack on Thursday night, Pakistan carried out overnight strikes on Kabul and declared what it called an “open war” with Afghanistan, sending civilians in border areas fleeing to safety.

France 24about 4 hours ago
Pakistan-Afghanistan conflict: 'Localised clashes still going on'

Localised clashes are still continuing along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border while Taliban officials say Pakistani aircraft continue to fly over Afghanistan's territory, reports France 24's correspondent Shahzaib Wahlah, following Pkaistan's bombing of major cities in Afghanistan including the capital Kabul on Friday.

Euronewsabout 6 hours ago
Pakistan and Afghanistan trade border fire as airstrikes hit cities

Pakistan is facing renewed fighting along its border with Afghanistan as clashes continue near the Torkham crossing.

France 24about 6 hours ago
Pakistan’s ‘open war’ on Afghanistan follows years of tensions

The Pakistani government declared “open war” on the Taliban authorities on Friday after an Afghan offensive launched on Thursday on its border led Islamabad to bomb Kabul in retaliation. But these tensions between the two neighboring countries are not new; they have been going on for years and have been exacerbated since the Taliban returned to power in Kabul in 2021.