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TTP assailants have opportunity of activity in Afghanistan Pakistan military boss

 Pakistani armed force boss urges Afghan Taliban to satisfy their responsibility under 2020 Doha Arrangement



ISLAMABAD

Pakistan's military asserted TTP aggressors have opportunity of activity across the boundary in Afghanistan, encouraging Kabul not to permit its dirt to be utilized against any Country.

"The Military of Pakistan have serious worries about the places of refuge and freedom of activity accessible to the TTP in Afghanistan,"


 Genor. Syed Asim Munir, the country's military boss, said on a Friday visit toward the southwestern Balochistan region following late goes after where twelve officers were killed.

The TTP is a combination of a few aggressor bunches in Pakistan that Islamabad accepts are as of now inside Afghanistan.
According to the military's media arm, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), he continued.

"It is expected that the interim Afghan government would not permit the use of its soil to perpetrate terror against any country, in the true sense and in line with commitments made in the (2020) Doha Agreement."


In two strikes and operations on Wednesday in the Balochistan province's Zhob and Sui regions, at least 12 Pakistani soldiers and seven militants were killed.

Munir also paid a visit to the hospital and spoke with soldiers who had been hurt in the assaults.
He described such assaults as "intolerable" and warned that Pakistan's security forces would respond forcefully if they occurred. "The involvement of Afghan nationals in acts of terrorism in Pakistan is another important concern that needs to be addressed," he said.

Asserting that they would not stop until the threat of terrorism was eradicated from the nation, he declared that existing operations against terrorists will continue.

Later, Munir left on a two-day trip to Iran, where, according to the military, he will meet with Iranian militarys and civilian figures and talk about bilateral defence and security cooperation-related issues.

Recent strained relations with the Afghan Taliban
Senior Afghan Taliban official and head of the group's political office in Qatar, Suhail Shaheen, tweeted on Tuesday.

"We are committed to not allowing anyone to use the soil of Afghanistan against any country, including neighbours, but as regards internal security of a country, it is their responsibility."

When they visited Kabul in February, Pakistan's Defence Minister Khawaja Asif and the head of the nation's top intelligence service, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Lt. Gen. Nadeem Ahmed Anjum, issued a warning to the leadership of the Taliban. They said that if the terrorists responsible for cross-border attacks in the nation were not eliminated, Islamabad would take action against them inside of Afghanistan.



Officials from the Taliban maintained that the TTP is completely absent from Afghanistan and has moved its entire leadership to Pakistan