Arab News

Islamabad, Kabul start joint survey after border clash, likely to use Google Maps

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QUETTA: Pakistan and Afghanista­n started a joint survey agreed on following last week’s deadly clashes along the two countries’ disputed boundary in Pakistan’s southwest, officials said Monday.

The two sides agreed to conduct a geological survey of the border villages to “remove discrepanc­ies.”

They might use Google Maps regarding the issue, AFP said.

Pakistan has said that Afghan forces fired on Pakistani census workers and troops escorting them, killing two soldiers and nine civilians on Friday. Islamabad also claimed 50 Afghan troops were killed in retaliator­y action, a claim Kabul denies, saying only two border policemen and a civilian were killed.

Kashif Nabi, a local administra­tor in Pakistan’s Baluchista­n province, said the surveyor teams, which included military officers, arrived in the border villages on Monday and were working “amicably.”

He said the situation is calm but that the border crossing in the area remains closed.

Sartaj Aziz, the foreign affairs adviser to Pakistani prime minister, told reporters neither side wants “any violence between our two countries or any loss of life.”

He said diplomacy must overcome the “misunderst­andings and restore trust,” though he reiterated Islamabad claims that Afghanista­n fired first.

Aziz said the two sides also agreed to look at the demarcatio­n line in the area.

“I hope in the next couple of days, the issue will be resolved through meetings between local commanders as well as at the high level commanders,” he added.

Afghanista­n refuses to recognize the so-called Durand Line, establishe­d more than a century ago when the British Empire controlled much of South Asia, as the internatio­nal border.

The line runs through the traditiona­l homeland of the Pashtun ethnic group, which dominates Afghanista­n and the border provinces of Pakistan.

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 ??  ?? Pakistani soldiers stand guard at the border crossing in Chaman, Pakistan, in this file photo. (AP)
Pakistani soldiers stand guard at the border crossing in Chaman, Pakistan, in this file photo. (AP)

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