Official sources here also rejected Pakistan's contention that the information provided so far by India on the Mumbai attacks was not enough for it to take legal action against JuD chief Hafiz Saeed.
'We have provided evidence five times against Saeed. This should be enough for them to act,' one of the sources said while pointing to the latest seven-page dossier India handed over to the Pakistan high commission last week that reinforced Saeed's alleged complicity in the Mumbai attacks.
Meanwhile, the Indian high commission in Islamabad has sought details of the global alert sounded by the Interpol's National Central Bureau (NCB) in Islamabad for 13 suspects wanted by the Pakistan police in connection with the Mumbai attacks.
The alert asks the Interpol member-countries to assist in locating the fugitives and immediately notify NCB Islamabad and the Interpol headquarters in Lyon with any investigative leads.
If the fugitives are located, Pakistani authorities will then formally request provisional arrest with a view towards extradition, in accordance with any applicable extradition treaty, the Interpol said.
Sent via the agency's I-24/7 secure police communications network to all member-countries, the alert - called a diffusion - contains the fugitives' names and other nominal data.