SECURITY — March 6, 2026
UNAMA reports 185 civilians killed or injured in Afghanistan amid border clashes with Pakistan
UNAMA reported 185 civilian casualties in recent border clashes between Taliban forces and Pakistan, while agencies warn of deepening humanitarian crises including hunger, aid disruptions and returning migrants from Iran. Funding shortages and restrictions on women exacerbate challenges.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV — corroborated by Hasht-e Subh and Khaama Press — 2 min read

Georgette Gagnon, head of UNAMA, stated that Afghanistan faces multiple crises, including the potential increase in returning migrants from Iran, which will pose challenges due to limited resources. She noted that over the past year and a half, more than four million migrants have returned from Iran and Pakistan. UN agencies including UNHCR and IOM are preparing aid at the Afghanistan-Iran border and in host communities.
Gagnon highlighted recent border clashes between Afghanistan and Pakistan, which have increased civilian casualties and disrupted humanitarian aid deliveries. She said border crossings closed since October have caused humanitarian and economic consequences on both sides.
In a separate UNAMA report, the mission confirmed 185 civilian casualties in Afghanistan from February 26 to March 5 due to aerial attacks and indirect fire amid clashes between Taliban forces and Pakistan: 56 killed and 129 injured, with over half being women and children. One incident in Bermel district, Paktika province, killed 14 civilians including four women, two girls, five boys and three men, and injured six others. UNAMA noted this exceeds casualties from similar October 2025 clashes and urged all parties to protect civilians under international humanitarian law.
The World Food Programme warned that escalating border clashes in provinces including Paktia and Khost are restricting access to food aid and health services, deepening Afghanistan's hunger crisis amid economic collapse, drought and aid shortages. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported at least 16,370 families displaced in eastern Afghanistan.
Gagnon expressed concern over severe funding shortages for 2026 humanitarian operations, with agencies requesting 1.5 to nearly two billion dollars to assist nearly half of Afghanistan's population, focusing on food, shelter and health services, especially for women and children. She reiterated UN calls to lift restrictions on women and girls, viewing them as a major barrier to Afghanistan's global engagement.
Read the original reporting at Amu TV →
Reliability assessment
3 outlets corroborate core event of border clashes between Taliban/Afghanistan and Pakistan causing civilian casualties (185 per UNAMA), aid disruptions, displacement (16k families per OCHA), and humanitarian warnings from UNAMA/WFP heads with specific details and dates.
The source language reads straight.
Across the newsrooms
Filed by 3 outlets
Amu TV
Originating
Hasht-e Subh
Khaama Press
Filed under
Security — UNAMA, Taliban, Pakistan, border clashes, humanitarian crisis
Spotted an error or have more on this story? Tip the desk on Telegram → or WhatsApp →.
Reader supported
Keep Ehtebar running
Every published story uses paid tools to translate reporting, compare sources, extract claims, and produce a clearer read on Afghanistan. Reader support helps keep that work independent.
€5
helps cover daily verification runs
€15
supports a week of source comparison
€50
keeps independent analysis moving
More in Security

Kabul Residents Express Concerns Over Lack of Distinct Uniform for Personal Guards
— Reliable

Public Awareness Viewed as Effective Tool for Crime Prevention in Afghanistan
— Unverified

Taliban Police Arrest Suspect in Kabul Vehicle Attack on Girls
— Reliable

Child Killed in Unexploded Ordnance Explosion in Ghazni
— Reliable