Fighting breaks out at the Pakistan-Afghan border, injuring civilians.

According to a Pakistani medical official, combat broke out between Pakistani and Afghan border forces for the second time in less than a week, injuring at least 16 people in Pakistan.
Heavy artillery firing at the Chaman-Spin Boldak border crossing began around noon (07:00 GMT) on Thursday, and an emergency was declared at the city's major hospital, according to Dr. Akhtar Mohammed, a hospital official.
He added that two children were among the injured and that "four people were in serious condition, and they have been taken to Quetta for further treatment." "No bodies have been delivered to the hospital thus far."


According to Pakistani military officials, civilian areas of Chaman were the target of "indiscriminate shooting" coming from the Afghan side of the border.
Authorities in Chaman informed Al Jazeera that markets close to the border had closed and that the city has entered a state of uneasy calm.
According to the Afghan Ministry of Defense, Pakistani forces fired first.
The Kabul government feels that dialogue is the best course of action, according to a tweet from the ministry.
In a clash between the two nations on Sunday, at least nine Pakistani citizens were murdered. The border crossing links the southeastern Afghan province of Kandahar with the southern Pakistani province of Balochistan.
The Afghan government was charged with firing "unprovoked and indiscriminate" fire by the Pakistani military.
Khwaja Mohammed Asif, Pakistan's Minister of Defense, stated in front of the legislature on Monday that Afghan authorities had "apologised" for the incident on Sunday and promised it wouldn't happen again.

Asif claimed that while Pakistan's border forces were maintaining the border barrier, a "provocation was launched by Afghanistan."
Kabul added that it would be "regrettable" if Sunday's tragedy happened again.
Nearly 120 kilometers (74 miles) northwest of Quetta, the capital of the Balochistan province, is the Chaman border crossing. It is a crucial commerce corridor and one of the busiest border crossings between the two nations.
When a Pakistani security official was shot and killed there last month by an unidentified assailant, the border was shut down for a week.
Relations between the two neighbors have been tight ever since the Afghan Taliban seized power in August of last year.
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), an armed organisation that is an offshoot of the Afghan Taliban, is allegedly being harbored by Afghanistan, according to Pakistan.