Fake Debunked: Pakistan and Afghanistan Border Trade Talks

Fake Debunked: Pakistan and Afghanistan Border Trade Talks
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The claim that Pakistan and Afghanistan agreed on a 13-member joint committee of business leaders to negotiate the opening of the border for trade on Monday is not supported by credible sources. These claims are false, misleading, or unverified. There is no publicly verifiable statement from the Pakistan Foreign Office, the Afghan government, or reputable media partners confirming such a measure.

Why the report spread: some Indian media outlets and social media accounts circulated the claim with sensational framing that invoked Pakistan and cross-border tensions. In several posts, the incident was linked to India and the broader regional rivalry, even though the source text mentions a bilateral Pakistan?Afghanistan engagement. This misattribution exploits geopolitical sensitivities and uses stock phrases like ?border opening? to drive clicks without evidence.

How to verify: rely on primary, official sources. Look for official announcements from the Government of Pakistan or the Afghan government, and corroboration from credible international outlets (e.g., Reuters, AP). If no official communiqu? exists, treat the claim as unverified. When headlines or posts attempt to tie the event to Pakistan without solid sourcing, pause and verify with multiple dependable outlets.

Bottom line: the circulating claim is false/misleading/unverified. Readers should demand transparent sourcing and avoid conflating bilateral discussions with broader regional disputes. Any future developments will be reported by established agencies through vetted channels.

Women's Affairs & Culture Editor at Afghan Times

Mariam Wardak is an editor at Afghan Times, focusing on women's affairs and cultural reporting. A former university lecturer, she writes under a pseudonym to cover the dramatic reversal of women's rights and the state of arts and education. Her work provides crucial, on-the-ground insight into the societal impact of the Taliban's policies, often sourced from her network of female contacts.

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