[Excerpt: Talking to this correspondent, a paramilitary officer said that  
about 15 Afghan soldiers were killed in the clash. The skirmishes between the  
Pakistani and Afghan forces first started when paramilitary personnel were  
collecting wreckage of an unmanned surveillance aircraft that had drifted into  
the Pakistan airspace and crashed in the tribal territory on Sunday.]
 
_http://www.dawn.com/2005/01/05/top2.htm_ 
(http://www.dawn.com/2005/01/05/top2.htm) 
 
Border clash leaves 15 Afghans dead: Pakistani killed in 'unprovoked  firing'
 
By Pazeer Gul
 

MIRAMSHAH, Jan 4: Fifteen Afghan troops and one Pakistani soldier were  
killed on Monday when Afghan militia forces started firing from across the  
border 
and Pakistani security forces responded it with their mortar guns,  officials 
said on Tuesday.
 
The heavy exchange of fire took place near the Saidgi checkpoint, some 15km  
from here, the officials said, adding that the firing continued from 1pm to 
4pm.  The Pakistani troops fired 80 mortars to target the Afghan positions.
 
Talking to this correspondent, a paramilitary officer said that about 15  
Afghan soldiers were killed in the clash. The skirmishes between the Pakistani  
and Afghan forces first started when paramilitary personnel were collecting  
wreckage of an unmanned surveillance aircraft that had drifted into the 
Pakistan 
 airspace and crashed in the tribal territory on Sunday.
 
Sources said the Afghan troops started unprovoked firing on the Pakistani  
paramilitary forces in which one soldier was killed and three others were  
wounded. They said that soon after the paramilitary troops had come under fire  
from the Afghan side, Pakistani security forces returned the fire.
 
The sources said that the personnel of the Touchi Scout had fired several  
rounds of mortar and heavy machine-guns to dislodge the Afghan troops from 
their 
 position.
 
An official said that the Afghan troops had set up nine pickets in a remote  
area which had also been targeted. Pakistan has formally lodged a protest with 
 the coalition forces operating across the border and called for an 
investigation  into the incident.
 
AFP ADDS: The Pakistani army and Afghan militia forces offered conflicting  
reasons for the clash. Military spokesman Maj-Gen Shaukat Sultan said Pakistani 
 troops responded with artillery rounds after the Saidgi area came under  
"targeted fire from the other side with long-range machine guns".
 
"This was a totally unprovoked and uncalled-for attack. They had to be sent  
a message that we will not tolerate this," he added. However, the border  
security commander in Afghanistan's Khost province, Mohammed Ayub, told AFP 
that  
the Pakistanis had started it.
 
"Pakistani militia or army wanted to cross the border and enter Afghanistan  
so the local Afghan militia forces attacked the Pakistani militia. There were 
no  reports of casualties," he said.
 
Private militia led by local warlords are still responsible for maintaining  
security in much of Afghanistan on behalf of the US forces and the government 
in  Kabul. "In many parts of Khost, Pakistani security forces cross the border 
and  set up check posts on Afghan soil. The main problem is that the 
Pakistanis do  not respect international rules," Mr Ayub added.
 
Military authorities in Islamabad said on Tuesday that the Pakistan Army  had 
acted in self-defence to respond to shelling from the Afghan side which  
resulted in death of a soldier and injuries to Others, according to our staff  
reporter.
 
When contacted, an official said Pakistani troops returned the mortar and  
12.7 mm anti-aircraft gun fire from the Afghan side into North Waziristan 
Agency 
 on Monday. "The number of casualties on the Afghan side cannot be 
ascertained by  us," said the official. Reportedly, Afghanistan has ordered 
extra troops 
along  the border with Pakistan.
enditem
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