BBC NEWS

Pakistan and Afghan forces clash 

Pakistani troops have exchanged fire with Afghan soldiers across their
common border in the latest in a series of similar incidents this week. 

A Pakistani military official said mortars and small arms were used in the
overnight clash. 

No casualties were reported in the skirmish across the line dividing the
Pakistani tribal region of Kurram from Paktia province in Afghanistan. 

The two countries share a mountainous 2,640km-long border. 

On Sunday, at least three people were killed after Pakistani and Afghan
forces traded fire on the border. 

At a meeting later to discuss the fighting, a US soldier and a Pakistani
soldier were shot dead in disputed circumstances. 

Both sides accuse each other of trying to establish posts on a disputed
hilltop in the Terimangal area in the border region. 

Reports say four Afghan troops and a Pakistani soldier have been injured in
the latest clashes. 

The governor of Afghanistan's Paktia province told the Associated Press that
his border police told him that Pakistani forces began firing mortars at
their positions early on Wednesday. 

"I told my police forces, be patient and tolerant, because fighting is not
the solution," Governor Rahmatullah Rahmat said. 

'Disputed' 

Last month, Afghan troops tore down part of a new anti-Taleban fence being
erected by Pakistan on the border between the two countries. 

Afghan officials had said the move led to fighting between Afghan and
Pakistani troops. Pakistan had denied the fence claim, saying the clashes
had started after one of its patrols came under fire. 

Afghanistan disputes the border between the two countries - known as the
Durand Line - saying it cuts off part of its territory. 

The Durand Line was drawn up in 1893 by the colonial British administration
in India. It left the powerful Pashtun tribes split between Pakistan and
Afghanistan. 

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/south_asia/6664485.stm

Published: 2007/05/17 08:18:01 GMT

C BBC MMVII

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