Jalalabad / AFP
A major Afghan-Pakistan border crossing reopened on Saturday after it was closed for several days following deadly clashes between the two countries following the construction of a gate on the Pakistani side to control cross-border movement, officials said.
The clash, which erupted along the Torkham border a week ago, left at least three Afghan policemen and a Pakistani military officer dead, with dozens wounded.
“The Torkham border reopened around 6 this morning after around five days of closure,” Mohammad Ayub Hussain Khil, border police chief in eastern Afghanistan, said.
“Everyday huge crowds of Afghans used to cross the border for medical purposes, but now they are only allowing people with visas and passports,” he said. The spokesman for the governor of the Afghan province of Nangarhar, Ataullah Khogyani, confirmed the reopening of the border saying it happened after “days of negotiations” between the two sides.
A Pakistani official who declined to be named told AFP that the border had reopened and “the construction work on the gate has also resumed”.
Pakistan’s foreign ministry spokesman posted a message on Twitter saying: “Only passport holders allowed from Afghan side.” The new requirement will affect thousands of people who formerly crossed the busy border post without travel documents.
The border clash prompted bitter recriminations on both sides, with Islamabad and Kabul summoning each other’s diplomats to lodge strong formal complaints. The Pakistani military justified the construction of the gate at Torkham, saying “terrorists” were using the crossing point.