WRITE for ATol ADVERTISE MEDIA KIT GET ATol BY EMAIL ABOUT ATol CONTACT US
Asia Time Online - Daily News
             
Asia Times Chinese
AT Chinese




    South Asia
     Aug 28, 2012


Security giant GS4 quits Pakistan
By Syed Fazl-e-Haider

KARACHI - The world's top security firm, UK-based G4S, has decided to leave Pakistan, where it operates under the name Wackenhut Pakistan Ltd, following a government crackdown in Islamabad on foreign security companies.

Last week, the chairman of G4S's Pakistani operation, Ikram Sehgal, said it had been forced to leave the country as it had become difficult for foreign security firms to operate there under constant government hostility. The parent company came to

 
global prominence last month when it failed to supply an agreed number of security personnel for the London Olympic Games, forcing the UK government to draft in thousands of soldiers for the job, many of whom had served in Afghanistan.

Though terror-hit Pakistan offers lucrative investment opportunities to both domestic and foreign security firms to flourish in an environment where terrorist attacks, kidnapping for ransom and robberies have become a routine, the government is suspicious about foreign stakes in security-related work.

Sehgal, who owns a 50% stake in the company, is expected to buy the company's Pakistan interest, although he rejected reports that it would cost as much as US$10 million.

"The deal is expected to take place within the next 14 days," The Express Tribune reported Sehgal as saying. "I'm not going to reveal the actual figure, but it's nowhere near $10 million for sure. The reported figure is simply wrong. A consortium of banks is helping us carry out the deal."

G4S, founded as a result of the merger of the United Kingdom-based Securicor plc with the Denmark-based Group 4 Falck in 2004, is a multinational security services company. Headquartered in Crawley, England, it is the world's largest security company measured by revenues and has operations in around 125 countries. It is the world's third-largest private sector employer with over 657,000 employees. Listed on the London Stock Exchange and Copenhagen Stock Exchange, the company is also a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.

G4S received its license to operate in Pakistan about 20 years ago. It employs more than 10,000 personnel, including 150 women guards, in the country. It provides security for the various agencies of the United Nations, multinational companies and banks and has major operations in Islamabad, Karachi, and Lahore.

The decision of G4S to exit the Pakistani market is in line with its strategy of making smaller disposals of less profitable businesses while expanding its footprint in emerging markets, according to a report in the Financial Times, a British newspaper. The report, while citing Sehgal, said the Pakistani government "doesn't want foreign security companies in the region, which makes it tough for outsiders to operate".

The government reviewed its policy following the last year's arrest of Raymond Davis, a US consulate worker, accused of killing two Pakistani nationals in Lahore. Davis was believed to be a private contractor employed by the American CIA (Central Intelligence Agency). The country's security establishment and intelligence agencies see the involvement of foreigners in security related work as a threat to national interests.

"The experience of Raymond Davis has left an imprint which continues to dominate policy. Any involvement of foreigners in security related work is seen with much suspicion," Nicosia Business Review, an investors' website, reported Major General Mahmud Durrani, former national security adviser to the prime minister, as saying. "I don't believe there is any flexibility in this position."

G4S is the second foreign firm to pull out of Pakistan by selling its interests to its local partner. US-based Brink's Company, which started its operations in 1983 as Brink's Pakistan Pvt. Ltd, has already left the country and it was re-named in 2001 as Phoenix Armour Pvt Ltd, a local security provider. Phoenix provides guarding service to a large clientele across the country, comprising foreign missions, oil companies, airlines, banks, commercial organizations and residences.

"The government doesn't allow foreign companies to take part in private security business," The Express Tribune reported Brigadier (retired) Rashid Ali Malik, chairman of the All Pakistan Security Agencies Association, as saying. "Brink's, which had a license to provide Pakistani financial institutions with cash in transit service, became Phoenix some years ago. The other foreign security company, G4S, is now being made to pull out of Pakistan while leaving its business to its Pakistani partner, Wackenhut Pakistan Ltd"

The private security business is booming in Karachi, the country's financial hub, where a worsening security situation continues to fuel investors' concerns. Lawlessness has turned the country's trade hub into a crime hub where land, extortionist and arms mafia groups, backed by political parties, call the shots. It has become impossible for the local business community to run their businesses without paying extortion money to such gangsters and many businessmen have lost their lives for refusing to pay them extortion money

The government has so far been least concerned about the problems of the businessmen and industrialists in Karachi, where industries contribute 67% to national coffers and 35% to gross domestic product. A country's business community in trouble reflects an economy in troubled waters. This is exactly the case with Pakistan, where cost of doing business sometimes may be the lives of the businessmen involved in creating wealth.

Foreign direct investment (FDI) fell 50% to $812 million in the financial year that ended on June 30, as against $1.63 billion in the previous 12 months. The decline in foreign investment is attributed to political uncertainty, a deep and worsening energy crisis and the prevailing law and order situation.

Syed Fazl-e-Haider (http://www.syedfazlehaider.com) is a development analyst in Pakistan. He is the author of many books, including The Economic Development of Balochistan (2004). He can be contacted at sfazlehaider05@yahoo.com.

(Copyright 2012 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.) 





US broke deal with Osama hit
May 12, '11

High cost to a devil's bargain
Mar 19, '11

US and Pakistan square off
Feb 15, '11


 

 
 



All material on this website is copyright and may not be republished in any form without written permission.
© Copyright 1999 - 2012 Asia Times Online (Holdings), Ltd.
Head Office: Unit B, 16/F, Li Dong Building, No. 9 Li Yuen Street East, Central, Hong Kong
Thailand Bureau: 11/13 Petchkasem Road, Hua Hin, Prachuab Kirikhan, Thailand 77110