Pakistan on Thursday remained non-committal on whether it would act on information shared by India on LeT terrorist Abu Jundal, days after New Delhi pushed it to take swift action against the perpetrators of Mumbai attacks.
"We have said this repeatedly and I think that it should require no miscommunication or doubts on each other's intentions because both our countries follow very very similar system which means that we know what is required to try somebody and what is not
"...I have repeatedly maintained that and all Pakistan officials have maintained that we mean what we say," Pakistan Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar said.
She was replying to a question on whether Pakistan would take action based on information provided by India on Jundal, who handled those involved in the 26/11 carnage in Mumbai, during recent Foreign Secretary-level talks in Delhi.
During their meeting, Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai had shared with his counterpart Jalil Abbas Jilani the information gathered from Jundal who revealed that he, along with LeT founder Hafiz Saeed, was in the control room in Pakistan during the 2008 Mumbai attacks.
Mathai also shared the information on Pakistani passport and Pakistan's domestic identity cards issued to Jundal in the name of Riyasat Ali, indicating the involvement of Pakistan's state agencies in the 26/11 attacks.
Khar, who is here to participate in the ASEAN Regional Forum meeting, said: "Today the problems we faced, the menace of terrorism is a common problem and if anybody can convince me that there is any other country in the region which suffers from it more than Pakistan I would be happy to sit down and have a conversation."