Kabul, Jan 07: As the border dispute between Pakistan and Afghanistan heats up, the Taliban has issued a fresh warning to Pakistan. Taliban has categorically stated that they won't accept any fencing on the disputed Durand line.
Afghanistan’s Taliban regime has said that it will not allow fencing by Pakistan in any form along the Durand Line, issuing a stern warning to Islamabad, amid escalating tensions between the neighbouring countries on the contentious issue of border fencing, a media report said.
“We (Taliban) will not allow the fencing anytime, in any form. Whatever they (Pakistan) did before, they did, but we will not allow it anymore. There will be no fencing anymore,” Mawllawi Sanaullah Sangin, Commander of the Taliban, told Afghanistan's Tolo News on Wednesday.
Sangin’s sharp reaction comes following Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi’s comments earlier this week, when he said this issue would be resolved peacefully, through diplomatic channels.
“Certain miscreants are raising the issue unnecessarily, but we are looking into it. We are in contact with the Afghan government. Hopefully, we would be able to resolve the issue diplomatically,” Qureshi said during a press conference in Islamabad on Monday.
The Durand Line, the 2,670-km international border between Afghanistan and Pakistan has witnessed periodic skirmishes between forces of these two countries.
Last month, a clash was reported along the south-eastern Nimroz province after Pakistani forces tried to extend barbed fences into the Afghan territory, with the Taliban forces promptly retaliating by tearing them down.
Similarly, on December 22, both sides were at loggerheads again, this time along the eastern Nangarhar province, according to Afghanistan-based Khama Press news agency.
Pakistan has completed almost 90 per cent fencing work along the 2,670-km border despite protests from Kabul, who contested the century-old British-era boundary demarcation that splits families on either side.
Successive regimes in Afghanistan, including the US-backed governments in the past have disputed this demarcation, which has historically remained a contentious issue between the two neighbours.
The border, known internationally as the Durand Line, was named after the British civil servant, Mortimer Durrand, who had fixed the limits of British India after consultation with the then Afghan government in 1893.
After the fall of Kabul on 15th August 2021, many expected a pro Pakistan Taliba. Afterall, it was Pakistan which kept the Taliban alive. But subsequent events have taken an unexpected turn. Yet, it would still be difficult to say Pakistan’s influence on Taliban has reduced in any way.