Afghans return home to rubble hoping truce holds with Pakistan

Afghan people stand along with belongings outside their damaged house in the Spin Boldak district of Kandahar province of Afghanistan on October 16, 2025, a day after the cross-border clashes between Afghanistan and Pakistan. (AFP)
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Updated 17 October 2025
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Afghans return home to rubble hoping truce holds with Pakistan

  • The UN recorded 37 civilians killed and 425 injured in recent days on the Afghan side
  • Islamabad said the temporary truce would last 48 hours, which ends on Friday evening

KABUL: Abdul Rahim surveys the rubble that was his home in Kabul, where he lived with six family members.

A gaping hole in the living room reveals only charred belongings and debris, while blackened teddy bears and makeup lie in what once was a bedroom.

The explosion at his home was one of four that hit the Afghan capital within a week, as unusually intense violence broke out with Pakistan — then suddenly halted under a temporary truce.

The fighting — which has left dozens of troops and civilians dead on both sides, mostly in border regions — represents the worst clashes between the neighbors since the Taliban returned to power in 2021.

“We were attending a graduation ceremony when I learned that an explosion had struck my house around 4:00 pm,” Rahim, a motorcycle vendor, tells AFP.

Two explosions occurred Wednesday afternoon following aerial bombardments, according to Kabul police spokesman Khalid Zadran. The strikes plunged central Kabul into terror.

Pakistani security sources meanwhile said they carried out “precision strikes” against an armed group.

Stunned residents have been clearing the rubble, hoping the ceasefire will hold.

“When I returned, I saw shattered windows, injured people lying on the road, and several dead,” says Rahim, now forced to live with relatives.

“War is not a solution — we hope for dialogue,” he pleads.

Next door, a yellow-walled school has also been gutted.

‘NOT A SOLUTION’

At least five dead and 35 injured were transported to a Kabul hospital Wednesday afternoon, according to Italian NGO EMERGENCY, which runs the facility.

No official death toll has been released.

Passersby stop to stare at the devastation, kept at a distance by security cordons and numerous personnel.

Three hundred meters away, a market in a residential area was also hit, with videos shared by local media showing a fireball engulfing the neighborhood.

Next to a tall building where at least seven stories can be seen charred, Safiullah Hamidi, a 21-year-old student says his uncle’s apartment was among those impacted.

“Pakistan should fight with our army if they want a confrontation, but not by bombing civilians,” he says.

Nearby, Samir Ousmani gathers up metal bars littering his car wash station, almost entirely destroyed.

“One of my employees was killed, and two others, along with my uncle, were injured,” reports the 22-year-old.

HOLDING THEIR BREATH

At the border, where the clashes have been concentrated, residents who had fled are returning home.

“Stores have reopened, and everyone is going about their business, but the border is still closed,” says Naqibullah, a 35-year-old merchant in Spin Boldak, Kandahar province.

The death toll continues to mount.

In the border town, 40 civilians were killed Wednesday in exchanges of fire with the Pakistani army, according to local health authorities.

The UN recorded 37 civilians killed and 425 injured in recent days on the Afghan side.

“Yesterday, the situation was terrible because of the war. I hope it doesn’t resume because there have already been too many victims,” says Aminullah, 22.

Islamabad said the temporary truce would last 48 hours, which ends on Friday evening.

“We are waiting to see what happens tomorrow,” says Shamsullah, 36, a biryani vendor.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said Thursday that for the truce to endure, the ball was “in the court” of the Taliban government.

Kabul has not immediately commented.


Pakistan arrests suspect arriving from Cambodia amid crackdown on human smuggling

Updated 14 December 2025
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Pakistan arrests suspect arriving from Cambodia amid crackdown on human smuggling

  • Suspect worked at an “online fraud company” in Cambodia, later started smuggling people from Pakistan, says FIA
  • Pakistan has intensified crackdown against human smugglers after hundreds of migrants drowned near Pylos in 2023

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) on Sunday said it had arrested a key suspect involved in smuggling humans who had arrived from Cambodia, alleging he was also part of an international fraud network. 

The suspect, identified as Zainullah, was arrested by FIA officials when he arrived in the southern port city of Karachi from Cambodia. 

Zainullah had traveled from Pakistan to Cambodia in September 2024, a press release issued by the agency said. 

“He worked at an online fraud company in Cambodia and later became involved as an agent in recruiting individuals from Pakistan,” the FIA said. 

The FIA said it recovered images of multiple individuals’ passports, payment receipts and bank transaction records after extracting data from Zainullah’s phone. 

It said the suspect received money through personal bank accounts and a cryptocurrency account.

“The suspect has been handed over to the FIA Anti-Human Trafficking Circle, Karachi, for further legal proceedings,” the FIA said. 

“Further investigation is underway.”

Pakistan intensified action against illegal migration in 2023 after hundreds of migrants, including 262 Pakistanis, drowned when an overcrowded vessel sank off the Greek town of Pylos, one of the deadliest boat disasters in the Mediterranean. 

Authorities say they continue to target networks sending citizens abroad through dangerous routes, following heightened scrutiny at airports and a series of arrests involving forged documents.

Pakistan’s interior ministry said this week illegal migration to Europe has declined by 47 percent this year after its nationwide crackdown, saying that more than 1,700 human smugglers have been arrested in 2025.