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Country Commercial Guides
FY 1999: Pakistan

Blue Bar


VII.  INVESTMENT CLIMATE
   
A.  Openness to Foreign Investment

The Government of Pakistan is open to foreign investment and
offers a package of incentives to attract foreign investors. 

Considering the openness of the investment regime, foreign
investment activity to date has been relatively modest and in
1996-97 registered a substantial drop in new FDI. Possible
reasons for this include inadequate infrastructure, lack of ideal
foreign investment environment, perceptions of political
instability, law and order difficulties, policy inconsistencies,
and resistance to the new policies by some elements of the
bureaucracy who have not yet fully adjusted to the new, open
economic environment. Besides law and order problem, there is a
need for continuity in economic policies, legal protection to
foreign investment and upholding the sanctity of Agreements. 
Pakistan needs to follow procedures that instill confidence in
foreign investors that contractual obligations are honored.  A
succession of investment promotion agencies, recently the
Pakistan Investment Board and its successor, the Board of
Investment (BOI), have lacked the bureaucratic authority or the
continuity of leadership needed to be effective.  

As part of an integrated investment promotion strategy, the GOP
undertook during 1990 a comprehensive program of radical economic
reforms including liberalization, privatization and deregulation
to bring the economy into a fully market-oriented system.  This
was aimed at capturing the potential of the private sector in all
areas of economic activity.  The privatization process has been
redesigned to make it more transparent.  Power generation,
telecommunication, highway construction, port development and
operations, the oil and gas, services/infrastructure, social and
agriculture sectors, have now been opened to foreign investment.

Pakistan's legal framework and economic strategy do not
discriminate against potential foreign investors, but enforcement
of contracts can be difficult given the inefficiency of the court
system.  Foreign investment is generally subject to the same
rules as domestic investment, with the exception of certain
sensitive areas such as defense production, banking, and
broadcasting.    

There is little apparent denial of national treatment for foreign
firms.  There is also no evidence of statutory derogation of
national treatment.  In fact, the Foreign Private Investment
(Promotion and Protection) Act, 1976, specifically provides that
foreign investment shall not be subject to more taxation on
income than investment made in similar circumstances by Pakistani
citizens.  In practice, the issue of extension of national
treatment is tested on a case-by-case basis, but apart from
sensitive industries, national treatment appears to be the norm.
However, the new Investment Policy provides equal investment
opportunities for both domestic and foreign investors.    

In new policy (announced November 1997) foreign investment on
repatriable basis has now been allowed in agriculture, services,
infrastructure and social sectors. The manufacturing sector was
already open to foreign investment. 

Key features of Pakistan's investment climate include the
following:

-     Relaxation of foreign exchange controls, and a general
policy of  permitting foreign investors to participate in local
projects on a 100 per cent equity basis.

-     Allowing of foreign companies registered in Pakistan to
undertake export and import trade. 

-     Provision of full safeguards to protect foreign
investment; 

-     Withdrawal of work permit restrictions on expatriate
managers and technical personnel working in an industrial
undertaking and easing of remittance restrictions; 

-     Abolition of the ceiling on payments of royalties and
technical fees;

-     Elimination of the requirement of obtaining a "No
Objection Certificate" (NOC) from the appropriate provincial
government, except for areas which  are classified as negative
areas (for reasons of environmental degradation, over-congestion,
etc.);

-     No requirement of government approval to set up an
industry in any field, place and size, except for the following
industries:

      -  Arms and ammunition
      -  High explosives 
      -  Radio-active substances
      -  Security printing, currency and mint.

      Note:  Establishment of new units for the manufacture of
      alcohol, except industrial alcohol, is banned.

The Government of Pakistan is committed to providing full
protection to foreign investment.  The principal statutory
vehicles for such safeguards are the Foreign Private Investment
(Promotion and Protection) Act, 1976 and Economic Reforms Act of
1992.  

Institutional Promotion of Investment -  One hurdle to investment
in Pakistan had been a bewildering series of approvals, permits,
and licenses required from various levels of government in order
to launch a project.  Successive institutional entities have
attempted to ease that process for prospective investors by
functioning as a "one-window" interface between the investors and
the relevant Pakistani authorities, and the situation is
improving with special efforts by BOI.

Incentives for Investment -  To keep Pakistan competitive in
international market exemptions or relief from import duties has
been allowed on imported plant and machinery which is not
manufactured locally.  Tax relief in shape of first year
allowance has been provided for category (A): value added or
export industries, category (B): Hi-tech, category (C): Priority
industries and category (D): Agro-based industries as well as
other new industries.  Tax relief has also been provided for
expansion and balancing, modernization and replacement (BMR), in
existing industries.

B.  Right to Private Ownership and Establishment

Foreign and domestic private entities are free to establish and
own business enterprises in virtually all sectors of the economy,
with the exception of certain sensitive areas such as defense
production, etc.  Private entities are similarly free to acquire
and dispose of their interests in business enterprises.  

The issue of private competition with public enterprises is
complicated by the fact that many of the entities that remain in
the public sector are chronic loss-makers.  The GOP has not
adopted visibly unfair competitive practices in these
public-private matchups, but the situation varies from industry
to industry.  In civil aviation, although several start-up
airlines have ceased operations, three private airlines remain in 
competition with state-owned PIA at the end of June 1998; the GOP
permits them to fly choice trunk routes and to undercut PIA on 
fares.  In retail food sales, the GOP has deliberately used
pricing in its several hundred-unit Utility Stores Corporation 
chain to inhibit rapid escalation in the prices of essential
foodstuffs.  Pakistan Steel, a flagship in the fleet of public
companies, has traditionally been heavily subsidized and this has
probably put its small scrap-melting competitors at a
disadvantage.  However, the Government is gradually moving out of
productive activities through a privatization program.  It has
largely succeeded in divesting such activities as cement
production and vegetable oil refining and has begun the process
of privatizing thermal power production, railways, 
telecommunications, remaining state-owned commercial banks and
natural gas.
      
C.  Protection of Property Rights

Pakistan's legal system protects and facilitates the acquisition
and disposition of property rights.  

Intellectual Property Rights - Pakistan is a member of the
Universal Copyright and Bern Conventions.  The copyright office
is a department of the Ministry of Education.  Copyright on a
registered design is initially granted for a five-year period and
may be extended for two additional five-year periods. 
Registration of patents and designs is administered by the
Patents Office, a department of the Ministry of Industries. 
Patents are granted for up to 16 years from the date of
application and may generally be extended for a five-year period
and, under some circumstances, for an additional five years. 
Legal remedies such as injunctions are available in cases of
patent infringement.  Trade marks are registered under the Trade
Marks Act, 1940, through the Trade Mark Registry, a department in
the Ministry of Commerce.  Trade marks are registered for seven
years from the date of application and the registration may be
renewed for an additional fifteen years.  

The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative has Pakistan on the
Special Section 301 Watch List under the Trade Act of 1988
because of inadequate intellectual property rights protection. 
Areas of specific concern include video piracy, unauthorized
reproduction of U.S. printed works, and textile design piracy. 
Tens of thousands of video outlets in Pakistan deal almost
exclusively in pirated products - and do so quite openly.  U.S.
pharmaceutical firms in particular have criticized Pakistan's
patent law for providing process rather than product patent
protection.  Other firms have noted the absence of provisions for
registering service marks.  A more general complaint has been
that, even where Pakistan's laws appear to provide adequate
protection, enforcement is slow, sporadic, and ineffective. 
The U.S. and Pakistan opened discussions some years ago on a
comprehensive bilateral intellectual property rights agreement
proposed by the United States, with the U.S. arguing that an IPR
agreement would improve the investment climate in Pakistan.  But,
these talks stalled in 1995 and Pakistan remains reluctant to
resume the dialogue.  However, the GOP three ministries involved
are revising the IPR legislation according to TRIMS Agreement.   
      
D.  Adequacy of Laws and Regulations Governing Commercial
Transactions

The GOP subscribes to principles of international competitive
bidding, but political influence on procurement decisions is
common, and these decisions are not always made on the basis of
price and technical quality alone.  The sanctity of contracts
also has been a major issue for some companies dealing with the
government.

E.  Foreign Trade Zones/Free Ports

Development of National Industrial Zones -  A composite scheme of
National Industrial Zones engulfing industrial estates, Free
Industrial Zones, Free Trade Zones and Export-Oriented Units
(EOU) and Estates for small and medium industries within areas of
its boundary would be launched to promote export oriented units.
Export Oriented Units will however will be allowed to be set up
all over the country.  National Industrial Zones will be
developed through private sector (domestic or foreign) under
investor, developer and promoter (IDP) concept.  

A single National Industrial Zone Authority (NIZA) will be set up
with statutory powers to carry out the responsibility of the
management of the NIZA.  NIZA will extend one window facility to
give permissions incorporating all required clearance of various
departments and arrange utility and other related services for
the investors to undertake industrial projects within the zone.

Free Industrial Zones will be multi-product zone where a variety
of export products can be manufactured, traded, exported or
re-exported.

Free Trade Zone will serve as an effective instrument to boost up
export trading.  Private bonded warehouses will be permitted to
be set up in the Zone to meet the requirements of the industrial
units in the Free Industrial Zones or other EOUs in the country.

An Export Oriented Unit (EOU) is an industrial unit which exports
its entire production excluding permitted level of Domestic
Tariff Area sales and reject.       

According to new Investment Policy, the incentives for free
Industrial Zones, free Trade Zones and Export Oriented Units will
be as follows:

(a)  Local DFIs/Banks may be allowed project financing in Zone.
(b)  Sale upto 20% of exports may be allowed to Domestic Tariff
Area subject to payment of duties and taxes.
(c)  Export of waste and defective items be allowed to tariff 
area are as also to bonded manufacturing units.
(d)  Exporters of a zone may be treated at par with tariff area   
counterparts for freight subsidy on certain items.
(e)  Inter-unit transfer of finished goods among exporting units
may be allowed.
(f)  Import duty and provincial tax exemption on imported
machinery and raw materials.
(g)  Duty free import of two vehicles for the projects located in
NIZAs.

The GOP also established an Export Processing Zone (EPZ) in
Karachi, in 1989, where special fiscal and institutional
incentives, details as follows, are available to encourage the
establishment of exclusively export-oriented industries. The
Government has established two new EPZs - in Sialkot and
Rawalpindi. The incentives are as follows: 

-  Complete exemption from all federal, provincial and municipal
taxes, any foreign exchange control and insurance regulations as
applicable in Pakistan up to the year 2000.

-  income accruing outside Pakistan exempted from tax;

-  the losses, if any, on an industrial unit set-up in the Zone
may be carried forward indefinitely;

-  import of equipment machinery and materials (including
components, spare parts and packing material) for enterprises
set-up in the Zone is exempted from all federal and provincial
taxes and duties including customs, excise, sales tax and
municipal taxes;

-  "One Window" service and simplified procedures - import
permits and export authorizations are issued by the Export
Processing Zone Authority (EPZA).

F.  Major Taxation Issues Affecting U.S. Business

U.S. industries have expressed particular concern with the
government of Pakistan's discriminatory application of the
internal sales tax between imported pharmaceutical raw materials
(taxed at 12.5 percent) and the same domestically produced raw
materials (exempt from taxation).
     
G.    Performance Requirements/Incentives

Government policies strongly favor investment proposals that have
large export or value addition and local content components, but
amounts are negotiable.  The local content policy, known as the
"deletion policy", requires that all investments based on local
assembly of imported parts, and that wish to enjoy favorable tax
rates accorded to new investments, have a "deletion program" to
raise local content.  The Ministry of Industries monitors the
deletion schedule closely and must approve any deviation.  

Some projects that have been sanctioned and are operating in
Pakistan have had considerable difficulty meeting their deletion
program timetables, which often prove too tight for investors to
organize a system of dependable, quality-conscious local
suppliers.  Relatively high duties discourage the import of
finished products, although the Government is reducing duties
across the board to force the Pakistani economy to become more
internationally competitive.  

The Government's investment policy provides that all incentives,
concessions, and facilities provided to domestic investors for
industrial investment are also available to foreign investors
without discrimination.  A number of concessions, such as
exemption from customs duties, sales tax concessions and a tax
exemption on investment, as well as guaranteed repatriation
facilities, have been introduced to accelerate industrial
development in the country.


H.  Transparency of the Regulatory System

Enforcement of the competition law in Pakistan is under the
jurisdiction of the Monopoly Control Authority, an independent
regulatory authority which lacks enforcement muscle.  The
Authority had its heyday during the populist period of Z.A.
Bhutto in the 1970s, but even then it was notable more for its
good research than its enforcement efforts.  Pakistan formerly
had a relatively high degree of industrial concentration, with
widespread licensing procedures restricting entry and serving as
vehicles for creating monopolies and oligopolies. The end of the
licensing regimes, the decline in bureaucratic controls, and the
liberalizing trend of the last five years have reduced industrial
concentration by bringing down barriers to entry. Certain
industries remain relatively concentrated, but for
industry-specific rather than systemic reasons. 
  
In a bid to deal effectively with environmental degradation, the
Government of Pakistan, on December 6, 1997, has promulgated a
major Environmental Act entitled "Pakistan Environmental
Protection Act, 1997" which provides a comprehensive legal
framework for addressing environmental problems including
prevention and control of pollution, management of the health
impact of climatic changes; import of chemicals and other toxic
substances; management, handling and transportation of hazardous
substances; and management of industrial, municipal, and
agricultural wastes as well as promotion of sustainable
development.    

The Pakistan Environmental Protection Agency (PEPA) is
responsible for enforcing the laws related to the protection of
the environment. PEPA, a relatively new agency still developing
its professional staff, is responsible for national environmental
policy, development and implementation of environmental
standards, and monitoring compliance with those standards.  To
date, PEPA has developed standards for municipal and liquid
industrial effluent and waste, industrial gaseous emissions,
motor vehicle exhaust and noise and air pollutants.

Public sector projects that are likely to adversely affect the
environment are required to file with PEPA a detailed
Environmental Impact Statement when the project is in the
planning stage; other projects may be required to file short
descriptions of their effects on the environment.  Potential
investors should contact PEPA at an early stage of the planning
process to ensure compliance with environmental standards.  The
review process for Environmental Impact Statements should take 90
days and may lead to approval, rejection, or request for
modification.  Each province also has its own environmental
protection agency; provincial Directorates of Industry may refer
a project to the provincial agency when there are concerns about
environmental impact. 

The Corporate Law Authority and the Registrar of Companies share
responsibility for outside regulation of securities markets. 
They and the members of the exchanges have cooperated in
streamlining processes for registration and listing of
securities.  The equity market is regulated by the Securities and
Exchange Ordinance 1969 and the Securities and Exchange Rules
1981.  The Companies Ordinance 1984 regulates stock exchanges by
setting out the provisions under which listed companies must
operate.   

I.  Corruption

Corruption is prevalent in both public and private sectors in
Pakistan.  Early in 1997, the government initiated an
accountability process aimed at identifying corrupt individuals.
An Accountability and Coordination Cell was established in the
Prime Ministers Secretariat, tasked with monitoring and
coordinating the accountability process. 

Those involved in corruption include politicians, bureaucrats,
members of judiciary (judges and lawyers) and the business
magnates.  The government has booked numerous cases of corruption
against renowned politicians including former P.M. Benazir
Bhutto, her spouse Senator Asif Zardari, Begum Nusrat Bhutto and
others, senior civil servants and bureaucrats working in both the
federal and provincial ministries and corporations like WAPDA,
OGDC, Pakistan Steel, National Highways Authority, PIA, Railways,
and Banks etc. Some of them have been dismissed from service, a
few arrested, while investigations are under way against some
very high officials.  The corruption charges include :
misappropriation of government funds, money laundering, frauds
committed in the purchase of project equipment, award of large
projects and services contracts in violation of the prescribed
rules and regulations, selling of the government lands on throw
away prices, allotment of residential lands to the favorites,
non-payment of huge loan taken from the nationalized commercial
banks and financial institutions.  The present system is so bad
in the country that 30% to 40% of the original cost of the
projects end up in the pockets of contractors and officials in
the shape of kickbacks and commissions.  The Federal
Investigation Authority (FIA), conducts the investigations on
receiving reports of corruption, either through the P.M.?s
Accountability and Coordination Cell or directly from the public. 
After the investigations, the cases are referred to the Chief
Ehtesab Commissioner for trial by the Ehtesab (Accountability)
Courts. 

The President of Pakistan promulgated an Ordinance on April 18,
1998, entitled "Eradication of Corrupt Business Practices 1998".
(This Ordinance already approved by the National Assembly has
become an Act now).  It is meant to control the future corruption
in the business practices for specified contracts of a value
exceeding one hundred million rupees.  According to this law, the
government may ask for a declaration in relation to the existing
contract from any person of any commission, bribe or kickback
paid by him, directly or indirectly, for obtaining or modifying 
contract, permission, sanction, license or other benefits in
whatsoever form from the government. In the case of furnishing a
false declaration, a punishment for imprisonment for three years,
or fine, or both will be given, and the defaulter will be liable
to pay an amount equivalent to the concealed amount to the
government. 

There has been much controversy in the country surrounding the
Independent Power Producers (IPPs), that the previous government
of Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto had received huge amounts of
kickbacks and commissions from the IPPs for approving the
contracts.  This controversy and the ongoing investigations by
the government against the IPPs caused serious doubts in the
minds of the foreign investors regarding the sanctity of
contractual obligation in Pakistan.  The country is plagued with
the incurable disease of corruption.

J.   Labor

Estimated on the basis of existing population of 139.0 and its
annual growth at 2.7 per cent, the total labor force is estimated
at 38.18 million as of January 1, 1998.  The unemployment rate is
estimated at about 5.37 percent during 1997-98.

K.   Efficiency of Capital Markets and Portfolio
Investment

The pattern of capital market development in Pakistan has been
similar to several Asian markets.  Bond market development has
lagged as elsewhere in the region.  However, the equity market in
Pakistan has registered phenomenal growth in terms of size of the
market and institutional development, but the fixed income
securities market has not developed as quickly.  At around 15
percent of GDP, Pakistan?s savings rate is one of the lowest
among developing Asian economies.  The bond market in Pakistan
covers debt and debt like securities issued by the government,
statutory corporations and corporate entities.  The market for
bonds of statutory corporations and corporate entities is at an
early stage of development.

The capital market reform package introduced new measures to
encourage the development of capital markets in Pakistan.  The
financial institutions reforms have paved the way for the banks
to operate on professional lines under the supervision of the
State Bank of Pakistan, which is now an autonomous body.

There are three stock exchanges in Pakistan -Karachi, Lahore and
Islamabad.  At present the Karachi stock exchange has about 780
listed companies with trading volume increasing from 1.1 million
shares a day in 1990, to about 50 million at present.  Lahore and
Islamabad stock exchanges are substantially smaller than Karachi.

In a major move to attract foreign portfolio investment the GOP
in its new investment policy 1997 has announced a liberalized
economic reforms package introducing new measures to encourage
the development of capital markets in Pakistan.  The package,
among other incentives, extends a capital gains exemption for
three years, exempts bonus shares from income tax, exempts
foreigners for payment of tax for investing in Fixed Income
Securities and removes the turnover tax on shares.

L.    Conversion and Transfer Policies 

Pakistan has a liberal foreign exchange regime with few
restrictions on holding foreign exchange and bringing it in or
out of the country. There are no limits on the inflow or outflow
of funds for remittances of profits, debt service, capital,
capital gains, returns on intellectual property, or payments for
imported inputs.

The average delay period currently in effect for remitting
investment returns such as dividends, return on capital, interest
and principal on private foreign debt, lease payments, royalties
and management fees through normal, legal channels is only a week
to ten days.  The delay for remittances by shipping companies is
approximately one to three weeks and airlines generally
experience delays of one to two months.  It is also possible to
remit funds through a legal parallel market by using Foreign
Exchange Bearer Certificates (FEBCs), which may be purchased in
the secondary market. 
      
M.  Expropriation and Compensation

Direct foreign investments are protected against expropriation by
the Foreign Private Investment (Promotion and Protection) Act of
1976 and by an investment and guarantee agreement.  The
Government's record with respect to expropriation of foreign
investment has generally been good.  Although a number of
nationalizations of private concerns took place between 1972 and
1975 under the populist government of the late Prime Minister
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, they primarily affected domestic Pakistani
companies.  The current government of Prime Minister Muhammad
Nawaz Sharif (and its predecessors since 1988) have credibly
emphasized the great importance of the inflow of direct foreign
investment and pledged to facilitate such investment.  This
implicit pro-foreign investment consensus among recent
governments and the two major political parties makes
nationalization or expropriations an extremely unlikely course in
the foreseeable future. 

N.  Dispute Settlement 

Legal System - Pakistan's legal system is based on British law,
with a more recent overlay of Islamic law.  The 1956 Constitution
established Islamic principles to serve as a guide to state
authorities.  Article 198 provides that no law shall be repugnant
to Islam.  Statutes are a mixture of laws carried over from
British rule and updating amendments and laws enacted since
Partition.

The tiers of civil and criminal courts begin at the tehsil
(sub-district) level and range up to the Supreme Court.  The
Supreme
Court, based in Islamabad hears:  appeals from the four
provincial High Courts and the Federal Shariat (i.e. Islamic) 

Court; references from the federal government; and cases
involving disputes between provinces or between provinces and the
federal government.  Each province has a High Court (the
Islamabad Capital Territory falls within the jurisdiction of the
Punjab High Court at Lahore).  The High Courts hear appeals from
judgments and orders of the District Courts (for civil cases) and
Sessions Courts (for criminal cases) and have original
jurisdiction in certain other matters.  District and Sessions
judges sit at the district level; often the same individual sits
as both a district and sessions judge, depending on whether the
matter at hand is civil or criminal.  There are also a number of
special courts and tribunals to deal with specific types of cases
(Customs, Banking, Environmental, Labor, etc.).

All of Pakistan's constitutions have provided that all laws
should conform to the injunctions of Islam, but there was little
focused effort on this subject until General Zia ul-Haq made
Islamization of Pakistan's laws a priority.  In 1979, Zia
reactivated the Council of Islamic Ideology (CII), which vets
legislation for compatibility with Islam, and codified the four
Hadood Ordinances in an attempt to make the Penal Code more 

Islamic.  These Ordinances provide for harsh "hadd" punishments
for violations such as intoxication, theft, and "zina" (unlawful
sexual intercourse).  The potential penalties are severe: 
stoning to death for unlawful sexual relations and amputation of
limbs for other crimes; however, to date, none of these penalties
has been carried out.  The Zia regime also established a Federal
Shariat Court in 1980 to hear appeals of judgments in cases tried
under the Hadood laws and to determine whether laws or statutory
provisions are repugnant to Islam. 

Pakistan established an Ombudsman in 1983 to deal with public
complaints against the Federal Government.  The Ombudsman is a
non-partisan individual appointed by the President for a
four-year non-renewable term and may not be removed for any
reason. 
The ombudsman's purpose is to deal with cases of
maladministration and to enforce some bureaucratic
accountability.

Commercial law follows British and British Indian precedents. 
The Contract Act is, in effect, a codification of the English law
of contract; Pakistan adopted the Indian Companies Act of 1913 at
independence and has built on it since.  Pakistan does have a
concept of bankruptcy law, again using the British model. 
Bankruptcy petitions involve corporations and businesses;
personal bankruptcy is not currently a widespread concept.  In
general, the court appoints a liquidator to sell off and account
for the property of the bankrupt.  

Security Interests in Property - The establishment of a
market-oriented housing finance system in Pakistan's private
sector is
in its infancy.  Until 1993, private firms were not permitted to
lend for housing, and the sole source of formal sector housing
loans was a highly-subsidized public lender, House Building
Finance Corp. (HBFC). Recent regulatory reforms have led to the
establishment of a legal framework for licensing and regulating
private housing lenders.  At present, two private housing
companies are operating in a regulated environment and offering a
variety of loan instruments.  In order to mobilize funds, private
housing companies may issue certificates of investment. 
Corporate Law Authority is responsible for licensing and
regulating new companies in the housing finance sector. 

Membership in ICSID/Domestic Arbitration Statute - Pakistan is a
member of the International Center for the Settlement of
Investment Disputes (ICSID).  The Center provides facilities for
conciliation and arbitration of investment disputes between
contracting states and nationals of other states under a
Convention for the settlement of investment disputes.  The
Pakistan Arbitration Act, 1940, also provides a mechanism for the
arbitration of commercial disputes under which the parties either
jointly appoint a single arbitrator or each appoint an arbitrator
who join a neutral arbitrator on a three-person panel.

Pakistan became a member of the Multilateral Investment Guarantee
Agency (MIGA), an arm of the World Bank, in April 1992, and
MIGA's first local initiative was to provide coverage for several
banking projects. 

GOP record on Investment Disputes - There have been no
significant recent investment disputes involving U.S. investors
or contractors.
     
O.   Political Violence

Sectarian violence, usually between adherents of the Sunni and
Shia sects of Islam is escalating in Pakistan, especially in
Punjab (Pakistan?s largest and most fertile province).  The
cities of Lahore, Faisalabad, Sheikhupura, Multan, Khanewal,
Gujranwla, Jhang (Punjab), Gilgit and Parachanar  (Northern
Areas) have been the site of the most persistent sectarian
clashes.    

The incidents of terrorism through bomb blasts in passenger
trains and buses, revenge sectarian attacks and targeted
shootings, cases of murders and robberies, car snatching,
gang-rapes, robberies in banks, jewellery shops and other crimes
are
taking place continuously.  In Karachi alone, 200 cases of car
snatching took place during the month of January, 1998.  By large
the car snatchers have spread their activities to other major
cities of Pakistan including Rawalpindi/Islamabad.  Sophisticated
weapons which should have been in the hands of army and police
were today in the hands of criminals.

The worst cases of terrorism took place in Lahore during January
1998 when a powerful remote controlled blast ripped through a
heavily guarded gathering of Sunni extremists in the Lahore
Session Court, leaving 30 people dead.  Also in the same month,
25 victims, mostly children were massacred  with indiscriminate
shooting during a religious gathering in the Mominpura Shia grave
yard of Lahore.  The Punjab government has taken steps to quell
sectarian violence and terrorism in the Punjab.  They have
arrested known extremist, set up anti-terrorist courts and
established a special anti-terrorism paramilitary force.

In Sindh, clashes between members of the Mohajir community
(Urdu-speaking migrants from India) and the government/military,
took
place in recent years, especially in the Mohajir neighborhoods of
Karachi and Hyderabad.   Military operations ceased in mid-1994,
but continued operation by the para-military forces (rangers)
over the past two years has led to a reduction of violent
incidents, however the dispute continues and political strikes
still occur.  Violence in Karachi greatly declined in 1996, has
again increased in 1997 and 1998.  In November 1997, four
Americans officials of the Union Texas, USA and their Pakistani
driver on their way to office were shot dead in a broad daylight
ambush at Karachi.  

There have been several cases of minor damage to
foreign-affiliated projects in remote areas in the past.  A
Japanese
road-building team temporarily withdrew from one of its sites in
one case; in another case, several Chinese engineers in
Baluchistan were kidnapped by an Afghan commander with a
cross-border grudge against the Pakistani authorities.  In the
latter
case, the Chinese were the indirect victims of this "old enmity".
Several hydrocarbon companies have invoked force majeure clauses
when tribal tensions precluded their drilling on exploration
blocks in Baluchistan.  

Political assassinations, usually of Pakistani political figures,
have occurred in the past, including during the 1997 general and
by-election campaigns.  Mir Murtaza Bhutto, Member Sindh
Provincial Assembly and brother of the former P.M. Benazir Bhutto
was murdered along with seven body-guards during September 1996
in a police shoot out.    

Few kidnappings of foreign businessmen or project engineers or
workers were reported during 1995.  No such incidents were
reported during 1997. 
      
P.  Bilateral Investment Agreements 

Pakistan has bilateral investment treaties with the Peoples
Republic of China, France, Germany, the Republic of Korea,
Kuwait, the Netherlands, Romania, Sweden, U.K., Spain, Portugal,
Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Kyrghistan, Kazakistan, Turkey, Kuwait,
Malaysia and Singapore.  A draft proposal for a Business
Development Forum to facilitate business development between the
United States and Pakistan was initiated in 1996, but has not yet
been finalized so far.
     
Q.  OPIC and other Investment Insurance Programs

As a result of a legal interpretation of the Pressler Amendment
to the Foreign Assistance Act (which resulted in the suspension
of new U.S. economic and military assistance to Pakistan as of
October 1, 1990), Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC)
insurance and financing is unavailable for commercial
transactions involving Pakistan, because of currently imposed
U.S. economic sanctions against Pakistan.  
    
R.  Capital Outflow Policy

Pakistan has no restrictions on capital outflow.  Those seeking
to transfer funds out of the country need only comply with the
procedures administered by the State Bank.  This liberalized
approach to capital outflow is part of Pakistan's effort to
integrate itself into global capital markets.  Although specific
statistics are not available, there is very little outgoing
foreign direct investment (FDI).  Pakistan experienced some
"Capital flight" in September and October 1996, but flows have
stabilized since then.   
    
S.  Major Foreign Investors

The United States is the top ranking direct foreign investor in
Pakistan.  According to the GOP Ministry of Finance, cumulative
direct foreign investment from the U.S. now totals $1,219.2
million.  The American Business Council, whose membership is
drawn from U.S. major firms, has over sixty members.  After
dropping off somewhat in 1992-93, probably as a result of the
political uncertainty which gripped the country during much of
that year, investment from the U.S. has been on the upswing. 
However, foreign investment has again dropped substantially since
October 1996, and in FY 96-97 will probably be only 50% of the
amount in FY 95-96.

[end of document]

Note* International Copyright, United States Government, 1998 (or other year of first publication). All rights under foreign copyright laws are reserved. All portions of this publication are protected against any type or form of reproduction, communications to the public and the preparation of adaptations, arrangement and alterations outside the United States. U. S. copyright is not asserted under the U.S. Copyright Law, Title17, United States Code.

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