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The frontier at the heart of Afghanistan-Pakistan tensions

Afghan refugees deported from Pakistan arrive with their belongings at the zero point border crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan in the Spin Boldak district of Kandahar province on October 19, 2025. (AFP)
Afghan refugees deported from Pakistan arrive with their belongings at the zero point border crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan in the Spin Boldak district of Kandahar province on October 19, 2025. (AFP)
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The frontier at the heart of Afghanistan-Pakistan tensions

The frontier at the heart of Afghanistan-Pakistan tensions
  • Afghan Taliban don’t recognise border known as Durand Line, describing it as “imaginary”
  • Islamabad maintains that the frontier demarcation is recognised internationally

KABUL: The border between Afghanistan and Pakistan has been a flashpoint during confrontations between the South Asian neighbors, most recently during deadly clashes in October.

The Taliban administration, like previous Afghan governments, does not recognize the border known as the Durand Line, describing it as “imaginary.”

However, Islamabad maintains that the frontier demarcation is recognized internationally.

Here’s what you need to know as talks resume in Turkiye to firm up a fragile truce:

What is the Durand Line?

The Durand Line is named after British diplomat Sir Mortimer Durand, who drew the boundary in the late 19th century with the agreement of Afghan authorities of the day.

Stretching more than 2,600 kilometers (1,600 miles) across mountainous terrain, from Iran in the southwest to China in the northeast, it divides Pashtun communities, the ethnic group from which the Taliban largely draws its support, and cuts off Afghanistan from the sea.

The border is highly porous, with some buildings straddling both Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Islamabad has built trenches and fenced most of the border, a move Kabul has repeatedly condemned.

Who crosses the border?

Millions of Afghans have lived in Pakistan for decades, many without documentation. Large numbers have been expelled or forced to return in recent years.

Around 500,000 Afghans have returned from Pakistan in 2025 alone, according to the United Nations.

Six official crossing points exist, but many use informal routes.

The border is also a vital commerce artery. Pakistan is Afghanistan’s largest trading partner, and trucks routinely carry goods such as fruit and vegetables across.

The Afghanistan-Pakistan Chamber of Commerce estimates losses at around $50 million since the border’s closure on October 12.

Only Afghan migrants returning from Pakistan are currently allowed to cross.

What fuels the tensions?

Security concerns have intensified since the Taliban returned to power in Kabul in 2021.

Pakistani air strikes in Afghanistan’s eastern Paktika province in December 2024, targeting what Islamabad described as “terrorist hideouts,” reportedly killed nearly 50 people.

Pakistan accuses Kabul of sheltering armed groups — especially the Pakistani Taliban (TTP) — that launch attacks from Afghan soil.

The Afghan Taliban denies harboring such groups and rejects the border itself, calling it a colonial relic.

Taliban Defense Minister Mohammed Yaqub objected when Qatar referred to the border in its October 19 ceasefire announcement, which Afghan officials linked to the Durand Line. Yaqub told a news conference it “will never be called a ‘border’.”

What’s next?

The October clashes, which began with explosions in Kabul and prompted a retaliatory border response from Afghanistan, killed more than 70 people and wounded hundreds in the ensuing violence.

A ceasefire brokered by Turkiye and Qatar has largely held, but negotiations in Istanbul last week failed to produce a lasting agreement.

Those talks are set to resume on Thursday.

Both sides have warned that failure to reach a deal could lead to renewed fighting.


Lahore’s residents choke on air pollution as toxic smog blankets ‘City of Gardens’

Lahore’s residents choke on air pollution as toxic smog blankets ‘City of Gardens’
Updated 06 November 2025

Lahore’s residents choke on air pollution as toxic smog blankets ‘City of Gardens’

Lahore’s residents choke on air pollution as toxic smog blankets ‘City of Gardens’
  • Lahore has topped air pollution charts multiple times since last month, with Air Quality Index readings rising above 500
  • Authorities say measures such as anti-smog guns, emission control systems in industries are mitigating recurring crisis 

LAHORE: As the sun rises over Lahore on a crisp November morning, the city’s iconic skyline fades into a thick grey haze. Commuters wear masks, schoolchildren cough in traffic jams as the pungent air bites the throat. 

With Air Quality Index (AQI) readings soaring beyond 500 in several areas according to Swiss air monitoring agency IQAir, Pakistan’s cultural capital has once again been choked by this toxic mix of smoke and fog.

Every winter, Lahore’s residents brace themselves for this suffocating season that disrupts routines, forces school closures and sends hospitals into overdrive. Amid record-high pollution levels this year, the provincial government in Punjab, of which

Lahore is the capital, claims it is fighting back harder than ever before. Residents, however, find little respite.

“Every year, we see a spike in respiratory illnesses between October and January. Even people who were healthy start complaining of sore throats, burning eyes, and headaches,” says Ayesha Shahbaz, a local general physician. 

She demanded the government take more rigorous measures to control the crisis.

Sana Zulfiqar, a 24-year-old resident, is also tired of the air pollution. 

“Because of smog, we experience coughing and breathing problems, which is why we’ve started wearing masks,” she said. 

On the streets of Lahore, famously called ‘the City of Gardens,’ the effects of smog are visible everywhere. Auto-rickshaw drivers wrap scarves over their faces, mothers tightly hold children in the smog-laden air, and doctors warn of rising cases of asthma and bronchitis. 

A PERFECT STORM’

Meteorologists describe Lahore’s recurring smog as a “perfect storm” of climatic and man-made factors.

“The main contributors include polluted easterly winds, stagnant air, cooler temperatures, and the temperature inversion layer that traps pollutants close to the ground,” says Farid Bhutta, a senior official at the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD). 

“Add to that vehicular and factory emissions and seasonal crop burning, and the result is inevitable.”

The city’s geography adds to the crisis, according to Bhutta. 

“[Lahore] is surrounded by agricultural areas and industrial belts,” Bhutta explained. “When winds are calm or blowing from specific directions, they trap the pollutants inside. However, when westerly waves move in, they help reduce the smog effect.”

Plain areas of Pakistan’s Punjab are prone to thick smog every winter as cold, heavy air traps construction dust, vehicle emissions and smoke from agricultural fires.

“This current situation is related to the Himalayan range,” he said. “All cities along this range, from Lahore to Delhi, face calm weather during these four months. It’s like when your kitchen exhaust fan stops working; the suffocation builds up inside.”

Climatologist Dr. Yunus Zahid said the common practice of burning crop residue, particularly in India’s Punjab, also contributes to smog in Lahore, which lies just 24 kilometers from the border.

“Crop residue burning in neighboring regions significantly affects our air quality,” he said. “The environment doesn’t recognize borders. Even if we do everything perfectly, pollution from our neighbors still reaches us.”

NOTHING WILL EVER CHANGE’

The Punjab Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) says they have undertaken one of the most aggressive anti-smog drives this year.

“We have installed emission control systems in industries, converted brick kilns to zigzag technology, and reduced industrial emissions by 70 percent,” Zafar Iqbal, the EPA’s additional director general, said. “These steps have helped reduce total emissions by 41 percent, improving overall air quality.”

The agency has rolled out smog guns, water-spraying machines that settle airborne dust in high-pollution zones, and has begun vehicular emission testing, with daily booths checking cars and motorbikes. It has also deployed 41 air quality monitoring systems across Punjab, including 16 in Lahore, and introduced mobile laboratories to check fuel quality at petrol stations.

“Vehicles that fail the test are sent for maintenance, and only those that pass receive a green sticker,” Iqbal said. “About 83 percent of Lahore’s smog comes from vehicular emissions.”

Though officials say the data shows mild improvement as Lahore’s AQI readings in October were slightly lower compared to last year, residents call for a stronger response. 

Adnan Raza, another resident, is tired of the recurring crisis. 

“Every year, we hear about new measures, fines, or smog guns,” Raza lamented. “But by the time November comes, the same suffocating air is back. 

“Sometimes, it feels like nothing will ever change.”