Pakistani Airstrikes Kill at Least 13 in Afghanistan, Taliban Says

KABUL, June ⁠10 (Reuters) – ⁠At least 13 ⁠people were killed, including 11 children, after ​Pakistan’s military launched air strikes in three Afghan provinces, ‌Afghan Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah ‌Mujahid said on Wednesday, in a renewal ⁠of a ⁠conflict that has killed hundreds this year.

At least 14 ​others – all of them children and women – were injured in Islamabad’s strikes that violated Afghanistan’s airspace and bombed ​civilian homes in the provinces of Kunar, Khost ⁠and Paktika, ⁠Mujahid added.

There was no ⁠immediate ​comment from the Pakistani military or government, but security ​officials told Reuters ⁠that Islamabad has carried out air strikes in what they called “hideouts and other facilities of the Pakistani militants using them against Pakistan.”

Islamabad has blamed ⁠Kabul for harbouring militants that it says plot attacks in ⁠Pakistan. The Taliban has denied the allegations and said militancy in Pakistan is an internal problem.

The renewed violence threatens to disturb a long lull in fighting between Pakistan and Afghanistan, allies-turned-foes who fought their worst battle in years in February.

The two countries agreed to a fragile ⁠ceasefire in March, with China trying to mediate a settlement to the conflict.

(Reporting by Mohammad Yunus Yawar in Kabul and Mushtaq Ali in Peshawar, ​writing by Hritam Mukherjee; Editing by Himani ​Sarkar and Lincoln Feast)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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