Biggest food program in Afghanistan | 10 lakh Food distribution in Torkham border with Pakistan

#food #weddingfood #pakistan #border #people #breakfastreceipe #weddingvideo #viralvideo #viral #viral_video Afghanistan-Pakistan border witnesses movement of thousands of people per day through different border crossing. Meanwhile thousands of trucks also use these points to move the goods from Pakistan to Afghanistan and Central Asia and vice versa. Statistics available with The Khorasan Diary, an independent news portal, shows that 1374394 people have crossed on either side in one year, while 234944 vehicles had passed through the border terminal in the same time frame The Afghanistan–Pakistan border barrier refers to the border barrier being built by Pakistan since March 2017 along its border with Afghanistan. The purpose of barrier is to prevent terrorism, arms, and drug trafficking, as well refugees, illegal immigration, smuggling and infiltration across the approximately 2,670-kilometre-long (1,660 mi) international border between Afghanistan and Pakistan.[3] The Afghanistan–Pakistan border is marked by eight official crossing points and nearly 1000 military forts [1]. In addition to these forts, Pakistan side of border is also dotted with more than 1200 border posts. There are over 400 forts in the northwestern area alone, with cameras, watchtowers, while more than 800 drones assisting the barrier.[4] Meanwhile Balochistan portion of Af-Pak border is marked with roughly 600 forts [2].The barrier and other measures are designed to impede the Afghan Taliban and Pakistani Taliban from freely crossing the border to coordinate and launch attacks against the governments of Afghanistan and Pakistan and evade authorities on either side. Despite the two Taliban organizations claiming to be completely separate from each other, Afghan Taliban leaders have been found operating from Afghan refugee camps in Pakistan and Pakistani Taliban leaders have been found hiding from Pakistani law enforcement in Afghanistan while systemically coordinating a joint militant network with their Afghan counterparts. Pakistani plans for fortifying, fencing and mining the border were renewed on 26 December 2006, but these plans were opposed by the Afghan government, citing that the fencing would result in “the limitation of the freedom of movement of tribal peoples“.[12] Due to Afghanistan’s fierce opposition to the border fencing, the Angur Ada and Sheken areas saw a series of armed border skirmishes that resulted in cross−border artillery strikes launched by Pakistan in April 2007.[13] On 1 April 2013, the Afghan Foreign Ministry formally protested and raised “grave concerns“ over what it called “the Pakistani military’s unilateral construction and physical reinforcement activities along the Afghanistan–Pakistan border in eastern Nangarhar province“.[14] In Afghanistan some groups do not recognize the Durand Line itself as a legitimate border between it and Pakistan, as it divides the Pashtun tribes who live on both sides of the border.[15] They contend that the installation of a physical barrier would divide people and make this border permanent.[
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