ST. LOUIS (Missouri): The United States is now focusing on stopping  the production of ammonium nitrate in Pakistan and hopes that a meeting in  Islamabad this week would lead to a ban on the substance, says Ambassador Mark  Grossman. 
The substance, a popular fertiliser, is also used for making improvised  explosive devices that have killed hundreds of US soldiers in Afghanistan.
The US Defence Department believes that about 85 per cent of the Afghan IEDs  are made with ammonium nitrate brought from Pakistan.
In his address to Pakistani physicians on Saturday night, Mr Grossman, the US  Special Envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, noted that the IEDs had also killed  thousands of Pakistanis.
“We hope that the July 5 meeting in Islamabad will deal with this problem  once and for all,” he said.
Senator Robert P. Casey, a member of the US Senate Foreign Relations  Committee, told more than 2,500 Pakistani physicians attending the convention  that they should use their influence to convince Pakistan to make a law banning  ammonium nitrate.
Ambassador Grossman said the US administration was already working with the  Pakistani government on the issue and hoped that the July 5 meeting would lead  to a positive result.
Assistant Secretary of State William Brownfield will lead the US delegation  to this meeting of the Strategic Dialogue Working Group on counter-terrorism and  law enforcement.
Source: Dawn News
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