ISLAMABAD (AFP) - Pakistan's foreign minister said the country would look at other options before going ahead with a plan to mine its border with Afghanistan, after talks with his Canadian counterpart.
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Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri said Pakistan would look at alternative ways to block militants crossing from Pakistan to fight in Afghanistan's worsening insurgency.
"Before we finalise we will definitely give due consideration as the objective of Pakistan and Canada is same, that is, to make sure that the unwanted movement is controlled," said Kasuri at a joint press conference with Canadian Foreign Minister Peter MacKay.
"We will be very happy to receive suggestions from Canada."
Pakistan, which is not a signatory to the Ottawa Treaty against the use of landmines, came up with the proposal after a spate of allegations from Afghanistan about the infiltration of militants.
MacKay, who also met with Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf after flying in from Afghanistan late Monday, opposes the proposal.
Kasuri said Canada would send "experts who will make concrete suggestions to us."
"We have also tasked the Pakistan army to come forward with suggestions," he added.
MacKay said Pakistan could learn from Canada's experience of managing a large border with the United States.
Musharraf "has agreed to explore some other options" on how to manage movement of people and stem activities of the Taliban," he said.
"I am very pleased that the president signalled that he would be open to this discussion and to perhaps having a working group that would focus on the subject matter," MacKay said.
During a visit to southern Afghanistan's troubled city of Kandahar on Monday, MacKay said he would tell Musharraf that mining of the border with Afghanistan was unacceptable.
"I do not accept the use of landmines," MacKay told reporters in the southern province of Kandahar, where about 2,500 Canadian soldiers are facing some of the worst violence of the Taliban-led insurgency.
A global treaty against the use of mines was agreed in Ottawa in 1997.
The accord has been ratified by more than 150 countries but Pakistan is one of 40 countries, including the United States, that have not signed up.
Pakistan said last month it would mine and fence part of the rugged 2,500-kilometre (1,500-mile) border.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai and the United Nations have also rejected the plan, which has prompted at least two demonstrations Sunday in areas of Afghanistan along the border.
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