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Pakistan's PM in Kabul for talks
By Dan Issacs
BBC News, Kabul
Pakistan says a fence will help stop militants crossing the border
Pakistan's Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz is in Kabul for talks with the Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
Relations between the two countries have been strained in recent days after Pakistan said it intended to build a fence and place mines along the border.
Islamabad says this will restrict the movement of Taleban fighters.
President Karzai says the fence will not prevent militants crossing the border, but will only separate Pashtun tribes and families.
Despite their many shared security challenges, diplomatic niceties are rarely observed between these two neighbours.
President Karzai has repeatedly expressed his frustration at what he considers to be Pakistan's failure to crack down on Taleban militants operating within Pakistan's borders.
And Pakistan's President, Pervez Musharraf, has made the feud personal by suggesting that Mr Karzai is in control of little more than his capital, Kabul.
So the visit by the Pakistan prime minister perhaps ought to be one of mending diplomatic fences.
But within this climate of mistrust, it is hard to see progress on the vital issue that affects both countries and the wider region - that of how to effectively control and contain Taleban forces on their remote mountain border.
source:BBC
By Dan Issacs
BBC News, Kabul
Pakistan says a fence will help stop militants crossing the border
Pakistan's Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz is in Kabul for talks with the Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
Relations between the two countries have been strained in recent days after Pakistan said it intended to build a fence and place mines along the border.
Islamabad says this will restrict the movement of Taleban fighters.
President Karzai says the fence will not prevent militants crossing the border, but will only separate Pashtun tribes and families.
Despite their many shared security challenges, diplomatic niceties are rarely observed between these two neighbours.
President Karzai has repeatedly expressed his frustration at what he considers to be Pakistan's failure to crack down on Taleban militants operating within Pakistan's borders.
And Pakistan's President, Pervez Musharraf, has made the feud personal by suggesting that Mr Karzai is in control of little more than his capital, Kabul.
So the visit by the Pakistan prime minister perhaps ought to be one of mending diplomatic fences.
But within this climate of mistrust, it is hard to see progress on the vital issue that affects both countries and the wider region - that of how to effectively control and contain Taleban forces on their remote mountain border.
source:BBC