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Old Friday, June 23, 2017
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Default Military and Security

Military and Security

Military expenditures:
  • 3.55% of GDP (2015)
  • 3.48% of GDP (2014)
  • 3.47% of GDP (2013)
  • 3.48% of GDP (2012)
  • 3.29% of GDP (2011)
  • Country comparison to the world: 21

Military branches:
  • Pakistan Army (includes National Guard)
  • Pakistan Navy (includes Maritime Security Agency)
  • Pakistan Air Force (Pakistan Fiza'ya) (2015)

Military service age and obligation:
  • 16-23 years of age for voluntary military service;
  • Soldiers cannot be deployed for combat until age 18;
  • Women serve in all three armed forces;
  • Reserve obligation to age 45 for enlisted men, age 50 for officers (2017)

Transnational Issues

Disputes - international:
  • Various talks and confidence-building measures cautiously have begun to defuse tensions over Kashmir, particularly since the October 2005 earthquake in the region; Kashmir nevertheless remains the site of the world's largest and most militarized territorial dispute with portions under the de facto administration of China (Aksai Chin), India (Jammu and Kashmir), and Pakistan (Azad Kashmir and Northern Areas);
  • UN Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan has maintained a small group of peacekeepers since 1949;
  • India does not recognize Pakistan's ceding historic Kashmir lands to China in 1964;
  • India and Pakistan have maintained their 2004 cease-fire in Kashmir and initiated discussions on defusing the armed standoff in the Siachen glacier region;
  • Pakistan protests India's fencing the highly militarized Line of Control and construction of the Baglihar Dam on the Chenab River in Jammu and Kashmir, which is part of the larger dispute on water sharing of the Indus River and its tributaries;
  • To defuse tensions and prepare for discussions on a maritime boundary, India and Pakistan seek technical resolution of the disputed boundary in Sir Creek estuary at the mouth of the Rann of Kutch in the Arabian Sea;
  • Pakistani maps continue to show the Junagadh claim in India's Gujarat State;
  • Since 2002, with UN assistance, Pakistan has repatriated 3.8 million Afghan refugees, leaving about 2.6 million;
  • Pakistan has sent troops across and built fences along some remote tribal areas of its treaty-defined Durand Line border with Afghanistan, which serve as bases for foreign terrorists and other illegal activities;
  • Afghan, Coalition, and Pakistan military meet periodically to clarify the alignment of the boundary on the ground and on maps
Refugees and internally displaced persons:
  • Refugees (country of origin): 2.6 million (1.6 million registered, 1.0 million undocumented) (Afghanistan) (2015)
  • IDPs: 847,368 (primarily those who remain displaced by counter-terrorism and counter-insurgency operations and violent conflict between armed non-state groups in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas and Khyber-Paktunkwa Province; more than 1 million displaced in northern Waziristan in 2014; individuals also have been displaced by repeated monsoon floods) (2016)


Trafficking in persons:

  • Current situation:
  • Pakistan is a source, transit, and destination country for men, women, and children subjected to forced labor and sex trafficking;
  • The largest human trafficking problem is bonded labor in agriculture, brickmaking and, to a lesser extent, fishing, mining and carpet-making;
  • Children are bought, sold, rented, and placed in forced begging rings, domestic service, small shops, brick kilns, or prostitution;
  • Militant groups also force children to spy, fight, or die as suicide bombers, kidnapping the children or getting them from poor parents through sale or coercion;
  • Women and girls are forced into prostitution or marriages;
  • Pakistani adults migrate to the Gulf States and African and European states for low-skilled jobs and sometimes become victims of forced labor, debt bondage, or prostitution; foreign adults and children, particularly from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka, may be subject to forced labor, and foreign women may be sex trafficked in Pakistan, with refugees and ethnic minorities being most vulnerable.
  • tier rating:
  • Tier 2 Watch List – Pakistan does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking; however, it is making significant efforts to do so;
  • The government lacks political will and capacity to fully address human trafficking, as evidenced by ineffective law enforcement efforts, official complicity, penalization of victims, and the continued conflation of migrant smuggling and human trafficking by many officials;
  • Not all forms of trafficking are prohibited;
  • An anti-trafficking bill drafted in 2013 to address gaps in existing legislation remains pending, and a national action plan drafted in 2014 is not finalized;
  • Feudal landlords and brick kiln owners use their political influence to protect their involvement in bonded labor, while some police personnel have taken bribes to ignore prostitution that may have included sex trafficking;
  • Authorities began to use standard procedures for the identification and referral of trafficking victims, but it is not clear how widely these methods were practiced;
  • In other instances, police were reluctant to assist NGOs with rescues and even punished victims for crimes committed as a direct result of being trafficked (2015)
Illicit drugs:
  • Significant transit area for Afghan drugs, including heroin, opium, morphine, and hashish, bound for Iran, Western markets, the Gulf States, Africa, and Asia; financial crimes related to drug trafficking, terrorism, corruption, and smuggling remain problems;
  • Opium poppy cultivation estimated to be 2,300 hectares in 2007 with 600 of those hectares eradicated;
  • Federal and provincial authorities continue to conduct anti-poppy campaigns that utilizes forced eradication, fines, and arrests
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