Trade resumes as Pakistan, Afghanistan reopen Torkham border

PESHAWAR: The normal trade and movement of people between Pakistan and Afghanistan fully resumed on Saturday after the two sides reopened a key border crossing that was shut nearly a week ago by Kabul’s Taliban rulers, stranding people and thousands of trucks carrying food and essential items.

The Afghan embassy in Islamabad announced the reopening of the Torkham border on Saturday on Twitter. Officials from Pakistan and a Taliban-appointed administrator in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar province also confirmed the border crossing is open to passengers and trade.

The announcement sparked a wave of joy among those who had been waiting for the reopening of the international trade route since Sunday, when Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers closed the crossing.

The Taliban had claimed Islamabad was not abiding by an agreement with Kabul to allow sick Afghan patients and their caretakers to cross into Pakistan without travel documents for medical care.

Last Monday, Afghan Taliban forces and Pakistan’s border guards exchanged fire, wounding a Pakistan Army soldier. Since then, officials from the two sides were in talks to resolve the issue amid demands from people on both sides to immediately reopen the crossing.

On Wednesday, the defense minister, Khawaja Mohammad Asif, and secret service chief, Lt. Gen. Anjum Nadeem, traveled to Kabul on an unannounced but previously scheduled visit and met senior Taliban officials to discuss the closure and other issues.

After the visit, the crossing was briefly reopened by the Afghan Taliban to allow some of the thousands of trucks that had lined up for days at the border — many with vegetables, fruits and other perishable food items — to cross over and ease the backlog.

But Pakistan shut the border on Thursday, saying it needed an explanation from the Afghan side about the abrupt closure of the border on Sunday.

Pakistani and Taliban officials on Friday held talks and finally agreed to reopen the border.

On Saturday, Zia ul-Haq Sarhadi, a director of the Pakistan-Afghanistan joint Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said: “We are happy to confirm that Torkham is fully open for trade and movement of people.”

He said jubilant Afghan and Pakistani truck drivers were crossing the key trade route with supplies.

Although the Torkham border crossing is a vital commercial artery and a trade route to central Asian countries for Pakistan, the Islamic nation has also accused the Afghan Taliban of providing sanctuary for Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militants whose cross-border attacks have led to a spike in violence in Pakistan.

Pakistan recently warned that it has the right to target TTP sanctuaries in Afghanistan if the Taliban administration fails to rein in the militants, increasing the prospect of more cross-border violence.

The TTP are a separate group but allied with the Afghan Taliban, who seized power more than a year ago as US and NATO troops withdrew from the country after 20 years of war.

The Taliban takeover in Afghanistan has emboldened the TTP, which in recent months has stepped up attacks in Pakistan, where security forces often raid their hideouts.

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