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Taliban blame Pak for airstrikes in Kabul amid Muttaqi’s India visit

Islamabad says Afghanistan sheltering militants, warns of action against them
<< Afghanistan’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi addresses a press conference in New Delhi. PTI

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Afghanistan's Taliban government on Friday accused Pakistan of carrying out airstrikes on its territory and warned of “consequences” as Islamabad said it was taking action against militants. Eleven more Pakistani soldiers were killed on Friday in a clash with Islamist militants in the Tirah area close to the Afghan border, according to Pakistani security officials. Islamabad says militants of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) group operate from Afghanistan, a charge denied by Kabul.

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The Taliban administration blamed Pakistan for airstrikes in Kabul, the capital, late on Thursday and in the eastern province of Paktika around midnight. “This is an unprecedented, violent and provocative act in the history of Afghanistan and Pakistan,” an Afghan Defence Ministry statement said.

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“If the situation escalates further following these actions, the consequences will be the responsibility of the Pakistani military.”

According to the Taliban, there were no casualties from the airstrikes. A Pakistani security official said a vehicle used by the leader of the TTP, Noor Wali Mehsud, was targeted in the Kabul airstrike.

Islamabad has said its patience with Kabul is running out, without acknowledging or denying carrying out the airstrikes. Lieutenant General Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry, the Pakistani military spokesman, "noted" the reports of the strikes.

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"To protect the lives of the people of Pakistan, we are doing, and will continue to do, whatever is necessary," Chaudhry told a press conference. "Our demand to Afghanistan: Your soil must not be used for terrorism against Pakistan."

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