(12 May 2015) RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kabul - 12 May 2015
++QUALITY AS INCOMING++
1. Afghan President, Mohammad Ashraf Ghani, and Pakistan's Prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, arriving at news conference
2. Wide of news conference
3. Pakistani delegation
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Nawaz Sharif, Pakistan's Prime minister:
"I assure you, Mr. President, that these enemies of Afghanistan cannot be friends of Pakistan. We won't recognise that an enduring peace in Afghanistan will be a distant dream without an inclusive intra-Afghan reconciliation. I reaffirm Pakistan's full support to an Afghan hold and an Afghan held peace and reconciliation process and insure the president of bringing all possible efforts in this regard."
5. Sharif and Ghani on podium
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Nawaz Sharif, Pakistan's Prime minister:
"We strongly condemn the increasing violence and Operation Azem offensive by Afghan Taliban. Continuation of such offensive and that will be constitute as terrorist acts and we condemn such attacks in strongest terms."
7. Close of hand writing notes
8. SOUNDBITE (Pashto) Ashraf Ghani, Afghan President:
"Today there is no good and bad terrorism, terrorism is terrorism. A kid in Peshawar or a kid in Yahya Khail (area in southern Afghanistan) has the same value and importance, so we all must stand together against these risks."
9. Cutaway
10. Ghani and Sharif shaking hands
11. Ghani and Sharif leaving the news conference
STORYLINE
Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and the country's top civil and military leaders arrived in Kabul on Tuesday for key talks on ways to step up cooperation between the two neighbours in the battle against militants.
Pakistan's delegation included Army Chief General Raheel Sharif and the head of Pakistan's intelligence agency, General Rizwan Akhtar.
During a joint news conference with Afghanistan's president Ashraf Ghani, Sharif said that enemies of Afghanistan were enemies of Pakistan.
He also emphasised Pakistan's commitment to support an Afghan-owned reconciliation and peace process.
The two countries have had a rocky relationship, troubled by mistrust.
But ties and cooperation have improved following a Taliban attack on a Pakistani school last year that killed nearly 150 people, mostly children.
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