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Pakistan and Afghan Taliban Agree to 48-Hour Ceasefire After Deadliest Border Fighting in Years

Regional mediation produced a brief pause following days of cross-border fire with competing claims from both sides.

Overview

  • Both governments announced a 48-hour truce starting around 6 p.m. local time on Oct. 15, though each side says the other requested the pause.
  • Fresh clashes on Oct. 14–15 centered on Kurram and the Spin Boldak/Chaman sector, with Pakistan saying it repelled assaults and the Taliban claiming to have seized posts.
  • Pakistani state media reported precision strikes on targets in Kandahar and Kabul before the ceasefire, while Afghan officials reported civilian harm and denied sheltering anti-Pakistan militants.
  • Casualty narratives remain conflicting: Afghanistan claims up to 58 Pakistani soldiers killed, Pakistan previously reported 23 troops killed and says dozens of Taliban-linked fighters were neutralized.
  • Key crossings stayed closed, trade stalled, and evacuations were reported as UN and aid groups cited Afghan civilian deaths and more than 100 wounded, with Qatar and Saudi Arabia credited for mediation.