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U.S. dollar ticks up

China

China

China

U.S. dollar ticks up

2026-03-14 14:04 Last Updated At:14:57

The U.S. dollar strengthened in late trading on Friday.

The dollar index, which measures the greenback against six major peers, went up 0.61 percent to 100.357 at 3 p.m. (1900 GMT).

In late New York trading, the euro declined to 1.144 dollars from 1.1521 dollars in the previous session, and the British pound fell to 1.3245 dollars from 1.3356 dollars in the previous session.

The U.S. dollar bought 159.61 Japanese yen, higher than 159.31 Japanese yen in the previous session. The U.S. dollar rose to 0.7899 Swiss francs from 0.7845 Swiss francs, and it advanced to 1.3734 Canadian dollars from 1.3626 Canadian dollars. The U.S. dollar climbed to 9.4467 Swedish kronor from 9.3433 Swedish kronor.

U.S. dollar ticks up

U.S. dollar ticks up

Pakistani warplanes struck several locations across Afghanistan on Thursday night and Friday, killing at least six people, including a woman and a child, and wounding more than a dozen others, local officials said.

The strikes hit a fuel depot near the country's Kandahar Airport, areas in the capital Kabul, and the eastern Nangarhar Province.

A Pakistani security source said the strikes targeted hideouts belonging to the Pakistani Taliban, also known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).

In Kabul's 21st police district, one of the areas hit, a market was left in ruins. Several cars were destroyed, and windows of buildings in the market and nearby areas were shattered. A crater caused by the Pakistani airstrikes was also visible.

"This is my car. I had parked it here, and it was the only way I could bring food to my family's table. It was my sole source of income and my only means of employment. Now my car is in this condition, and I have no other way to provide for my family," said Mohamad Ghulam, a taxi driver.

The airstrikes destroyed a house, killing four members of a single family. More than a dozen other households in the area reported their homes either fully or partially destroyed.

One of the victims was 22-year-old Hedayatullah, who had just been married. He was killed alongside his pregnant wife, as well as his brother and sister.

"Hedayatullah got married nine months ago. His brother was 18 years old. He himself was 22 years old, he also had a 12-year-old sister, and his wife was about 19 years old and was pregnant," said Ghulam Sakhi, a relative of the victims.

"This neighbor of ours was a family of five. Their mother was not present at the moment of the bombardment, but the rest of them lost their lives. It was Hedayatuallah's family. From my own family, two of my daughters, my sister-in-law, my brother, and two nieces got injured," said Mohamad Homayoun, a survivor.

In the past weeks, scores of people from both sides have been killed or injured in the conflict between Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan, according to officials from the two countries.

The United Nations mission in Afghanistan has called for an immediate halt to cross-border clashes, warning that the escalating violence is driving a surge in civilian casualties and deepening a humanitarian crisis.

At least 6 killed, more than a dozen wounded in Pakistani airstrikes on Afghanistan: officials

At least 6 killed, more than a dozen wounded in Pakistani airstrikes on Afghanistan: officials

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