Chaman standoff continues after second day of talks:
QUETTA: The situation on the Afghan border remained calm on Saturday but the security forces on both sides remained alert and there was no traffic between Chaman and Kandahar for the second day.

A second flag meeting between Pakistani and Afghan military commanders,
held at the Friendship Gate, remained inconclusive. Earlier, a meeting
held on Friday evening had also ended without any decision.
According to sources, Saturday’s meeting continued for over an hour.
Top relief official says around 2,000 families living in villages have been affected by the attacks
Frontier Corps Sector Commander (North) Brig Nadeem Sohail
represented Pakistan and Gen Ahmedi of the Afghan National Army led his
country’s delegation. Both sides discussed Friday’s incident and
defended their stances.
“The flag meeting ended without any concrete decision,” a security official said.
He
said Pakistani officials had stressed that the villages where the
census staff were conducting the population count near the border
belonged to Pakistan.
“The Afghan general and his
delegation went back to Afghanistan without any decision,” the sources
said, but added that more meetings at this level could not be ruled out.
Meanwhile, Pakistan deployed more army and FC troops on the border.
The Afghan government withdrew police from the border area and deployed army personnel.
The
authorities concerned asked the people living in the villages close to
the border to shift to safe places. Majority of the villagers have
already left their homes.
The authorities have restricted the movement of people in the areas till the situation normalises.
“There is no movement of people and vehicles in the border areas,” an official of the Chaman administration said.
Hundreds
of trucks and other vehicles carrying Afghan transit trade goods and
Nato supplies were stuck on both sides of the border as the crossing
points at the Friendship Gate and other places were closed.
“The Friendship Gate will not open till the issue is resolved,” the officials said.
The authorities in the border town Chaman closed all schools and colleges for an indefinite period.
Balochistan
Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) Director General
Muhammad Tariq said around 2,000 families living in villages close to
the border had been affected by the attacks.
He said at a
press conference that 19 trucks loaded with relief goods, including
food, tents and blankets, worth Rs40 million had reached Chaman for
distribution among the affected families.
He said the assessment of the losses had also been launched and the government would compensate the affected families.
Chief Minister Nawab Sanaullah Zehri had earlier announced an allocation of Rs150m to cover the damage in Chaman.
Befitting response
Defence
Minister Khawaja Mohammad Asif stressed the need for promoting mutual
cooperation between Pakistan and Afghanistan for the elimination of
terrorism and establishment of durable peace in the region, our
correspondent in Sialkot adds.
Talking to reporters, he
said Pakistan wanted good relations with Afghanistan and would continue
its sincere efforts for the purpose.
He said the country had again offered its full cooperation to the Afghan government to eliminate terrorism and restore peace.
The minister, however, condemned the killing of innocent Pakistanis in the attacks by Afghan forces.
He
said Pakistan was monitoring the situation on its borders and would
take whatever measures were needed to protect its boundaries.
He said the country would respond instantly and effectively in a befitting way to the enemy on border violations.
Mr Asif said Pakistan was successfully eliminating terrorism and continuously playing a frontline role for global peace.
According
to AP, the minister also said in strongly worded televised remarks that
the latest skirmishes were a reflection of a “nexus” between Kabul and
New Delhi.
He said the Afghan government had not
positively responded to efforts made by Pakistan to improve relations
with Afghanistan in recent months.
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