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Musharraf Pledges Support to Kabul

Karzai, left, shakes hands with Musharraf following their Tuesday news conference

KABUL, April 2 (News Agencies) – On his first visit to Afghanistan since the fall of Islamabad's former Taliban ally, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf pledged Tuesday to support his neighboring war-torn country.

Speaking alongside interim Afghan leader Hamid Karzai at a news conference in Kabul Tuesday, April 2, General Musharraf said: "We will not allow each other's countries to be used against the interests [of one another]."

He also pledged to co-operate with Afghanistan's new administration in wiping out "terrorist sanctuaries" in the region.

General Musharraf said that he had "made it absolutely clear Pakistan has only one aim - to assist Afghanistan," BBC’s online news service reported.

Musharraf had arrived in the Afghan capital Tuesday, April 2, in a Pakistani military plane and drove away from Kabul international airport in a blacked-out Mercedes amid one of the tightest security operations the capital has seen since the Taliban regime collapsed last November. 

Armed guards were stationed at 50 meter (165 feet) intervals along Maidan Road leading from the airport to the center of town. 

The two leaders met earlier this year when Karzai made a brief trip to Islamabad, and pledged to rebuild bilateral relations between the neighboring Islamic states in the wake of the Taliban's ouster. 

He met Karzai amid tight security and is expected to return to Islamabad later on Tuesday.

The meeting marks a watershed for relations between the two countries.

Pakistan had originally been one of the few supporters of Afghanistan's now ousted Taliban regime, developing close links through its intelligence services.

However, last year General Musharraf decided to back the American-led war on terror following the 11 September attacks.

General Musharraf has consistently reassured Afghanistan's new interim government that it has his full backing in rebuilding the country.

He has said that Pakistan is extremely interested in a stable, peaceful, united Afghanistan as a brotherly neighbor.

In a visit to Islamabad in February this year, Karzai told journalists that Afghanistan's suspicion of Pakistan caused by its previous support for the Taliban was a thing of the past.

Karzai also said that Afghanistan would release young Pakistanis captured while fighting for the Taliban regime if they had no involvement with terrorism.

Pakistan has since pledged $100m for the reconstruction of Afghanistan and is keen to have a role in development work there.

Pakistan also wants to encourage the repatriation of nearly two million Afghan refugees who have been living in the country for the past two decades. 

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