1. Wide exterior of Prime Minister's House
2. Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz shaking hands with King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz of Saudi Arabia zoom in to handshake
3. Cameramen cutaway
4. Wide of Aziz, Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf and King Abdullah at talks
5. Mid of King Abdullah zoom out to show him talking to King Abdullah
7.Cutaway of chandelier
8. Musharraf, Aziz and King Abdullah walking into room and seating themselves at table
9. Mid shot Saudi delegation
10. Pakistani Foreign Minister Khursheed Mehmood Kasuri signing documents
11. Saudi finance minister signing bilateral agreements
12. Wide of signing ceremony
13. Close up of King Abdullah
14. Wide of dignitaries standing for photo op
17. King Abdullah and Musharraf shaking hands
STORYLINE:
Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah held wide-ranging talks on Thursday with Pakistan's prime minister on Iran's nuclear program, Iraq and Afghanistan, according to Pakistani state radio.
Abdullah, making the first visit to Pakistan by a Saudi monarch in 30 years, also discussed economic cooperation and India-Pakistan relations in his meeting with Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz in Islamabad.
Radio Pakistan gave no details of their discussions on Iran, which came as the board of the UN nuclear watchdog met in Vienna to decide whether to refer Tehran to the Security Council over concerns it may be seeking nuclear weapons.
Pakistan opposes the referral, and Saudi Arabia, which wants a nuclear-free Middle East, last month urged more time for negotiations.
Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, both Islamic nations, have close and long-standing ties.
Both are US allies in the war against terrorism and have fought homegrown Islamic militants in recent years.
At the start of his two-day visit Wednesday, Abdullah received Pakistan's highest award, Nishan-e-Pakistan, and met with President General Pervez Musharraf.
On Thursday, the two governments signed five agreements on promoting political consultations, cooperation in technical education and easing taxes on bilateral trade, state radio reported.
Saudi Arabia is Pakistan's largest oil supplier and trade between the two countries in 2004-2005 was worth 2.8 (b) billion US dollars, according to the Foreign Ministry.
Pakistan's Dawn newspaper said the Pakistan expected to get around 2 (b) billion US dollars worth of crude oil from Saudi Arabia under a special financing arrangement to reduce mounting pressure on its foreign exchange reserves.
The king was scheduled to return home later Thursday.
Abdullah has visited Pakistan before, including a tour in October 2003 when he was a crown prince, but the last visit by a Saudi king was in 1976.
Keyword-royalty
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