Kabul, Afghanistan and Pakistan
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The Taliban-ruled state has suffered Pakistani strikes against government installations over the past week following accusations, which it denies, that it harbors militants.
KABUL – Blasts and gunfire were heard in Kabul on Sunday (March 1), a Reuters journalist in the Afghan capital said, as fighting between Afghanistan and Pakistan entered a fourth day.Explosions echoed across parts of the city before sunrise,
AFP journalists in Kabul heard multiple explosions and gunfire on Tuesday, as Afghan and Pakistani troops keep up their border battles. The blasts in the Afghan capital were heard alongside anti-aircraft weapons and gunfire from across the city,
An explosion followed by successive gunfire were heard in central Kabul on Sunday, AFP journalists reported, with the Taliban government saying Afghan forces were shooting at a fresh incursion by Pakistani aircraft.
Explosions rattled Kabul before sunrise Sunday as tensions along the Afghan-Pakistani border spiraled into one of the region’s heaviest confrontations
Pakistan bombed major cities in Afghanistan including the capital Kabul on February 27, 2026 but a widely shared video supposedly depicting the air strikes is unrelated. The misrepresented clip is
Daily life in Kabul continued Monday, for the fourth consecutive day, under the shadow of the night bombings due to the war with Islamabad and the panic of shortage among residents due to the closure of the trade routes with Pakistan and the instability of neighboring Iran.
Kabul claims 55 civilians were killed in fighting sparked by retaliatory operations along the border, while Pakistan says more than 400 Afghan Taliban forces have died and denies targeting civilians.