ISLAMABAD - A high-level Afghan delegation held a daylong official visit to neighboring Pakistan Sunday to discuss bilateral matters, border management and regional security.

Afghan National Security Adviser Haneef Atmar led a team of top security officials, including the country’s interior minister and heads of the army and the intelligence agency.

The visitors held discussions with Pakistani National Security Adviser Nasser Janjua after landing in Islamabad.

Janjua’s office said in a brief statement both sides reiterated their resolve to work jointly on issues related to bilateral ties and security.

The Afghan delegation also met with Pakistan’s military chief, General Qamar Javed Bajwa.

Islamabad and Kabul earlier this month put into operation a new bilateral engagement framework called the Afghanistan-Pakistan Action Plan for Peace and Solidarity (APAPPS) for “eliminating terrorism and achieving peace, stability, prosperity and development of the people of the two countries.”

Atamar tweeted Sunday that his delegation planned to hold detailed discussions on the implementation of APAPPS.

Mutual allegations of supporting militant attacks against each other have long dogged relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The two sides, however, have acknowledged that recent high-level contacts between their civilian and security officials are easing mutual tensions.