(15 Apr 2018) Afghan troops clashed with Pakistani forces near their disputed border on Sunday, in fighting that killed two Pakistani paramilitaries and wounded five others, officials said.
Pakistan's military said in a statement that the Frontier Corps was carrying out "routine surveillance" along the border when it was "fired upon from the Afghanistan side."
It said the paramilitaries showed "maximum restraint" to avoid civilian casualties.
The acting provincial police chief in Afghanistan's eastern Khost province, said the fighting broke out after Pakistani forces crossed into Afghanistan.
The two countries are separated by the 2,400-kilometre (1,500-mile) Durand Line, which was drawn by British rulers in 1896.
Afghanistan does not recognise it as an international border and has objected to new fortifications being built by Pakistan.
The two U.S. allies routinely accuse each other of failing to crack down on militants who operate along the border.
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