Pakistan Unveils Plans for Fence On Afghan Border
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Under growing pressure from the Bush administration and NATO to stem the crossborder movement of Taliban fighters, Pakistan announced yesterday that it would construct a fence and plant landmines along parts of its remote, rugged frontier with Afghanistan.
The measure was denounced by the Afghan government, and some analysts questioned whether it would be practical.
Foreign Secretary Riaz Mohammed Khan of Pakistan, who unveiled the plan, did not say how much of the 1,500-mile-long frontier would be affected, or when the work would begin.
“In keeping with our policy to prevent any militant activity from Pakistan inside Afghanistan, the Pakistan army has been tasked to work out modalities for selectively fencing and mining the Pakistan-Afghanistan border,” he told reporters in Islamabad.
Mr. Khan also said additional paramilitary forces would be deployed along the frontier, but did not say how many. Some 80,000 Pakistani troops are currently stationed in border areas.
In Kabul, an aide to President Karzai was critical of the plan.
Mr. Khan said both the barrier and the mines would be placed inside Pakistani territory, and therefore Afghanistan’s consent was not needed.
Afghanistan and Pakistan have been quarreling sharply in recent weeks over which bears the greater responsibility for cross-border infiltration by Taliban fighters.
Mr. Karzai has openly accused Pakistan’s government of fomenting militancy and aiding Taliban fighters; Pakistan has said the problem is that Mr. Karzai’s government has not effectively imposed the rule of law inside Afghanistan.
At least 4,000 people have died in fighting in Afghanistan during 2006, which has been the bloodiest year since the fall of the Taliban in late 2001. The insurgency has gained significant momentum in recent months, although NATO commanders say the rising toll is due to part to coalition troops’ aggressive pursuit of militants.
The Afghanistan-Pakistan frontier, a British colonial-era line of demarcation which has never been recognized by Afghanistan, cuts through the homeland of Pashtun tribes, whose members are accustomed to traveling across it without border formalities.