Anti-Narcotics Force
The Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) is a federal paramilitary law enforcement agency of Pakistan, established on 21 February 1995 through the merger of the Pakistan Narcotics Control Board and the Anti-Narcotics Task Force, tasked with preventing narcotics smuggling, trafficking, and abuse nationwide.[1][2] Operating under the Ministry of Narcotics Control, the ANF coordinates interdiction operations, prosecutes drug-related offenses, provides intelligence support to other agencies, and conducts demand reduction programs including awareness campaigns and rehabilitation assistance.[3][4] Staffed at senior levels by Pakistan Army officers, it functions as the primary agency for enforcing the Control of Narcotic Substances Act, 1997, amid Pakistan's position as a major transit route for opiates originating from Afghanistan.[5][6] The ANF has recorded substantial achievements in drug seizures, with operations yielding hundreds of kilograms of narcotics annually valued in tens of millions of dollars, alongside international collaborations such as capacity-building initiatives with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime to enhance border controls and precursor chemical monitoring.[7][6] It also supports demand reduction through educational efforts targeting youth and has expanded digital tools for case management to streamline prosecutions.[8] While effective in disrupting smuggling networks, the agency's operations occur in a context of persistent challenges from regional production and transit dynamics, with limited public controversies beyond occasional technical vulnerabilities like website disruptions.[9]Establishment and Legal Framework
Founding and Evolution
The Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) originated from precursors addressing narcotics control in Pakistan during the late 1980s and early 1990s, amid rising drug trafficking linked to Afghanistan's opium production and regional instability. The Narcotics Control Division (NCD) was established earlier, with the Pakistan Narcotics Control Board (PNCB) functioning as its attached department to regulate narcotic substances. In December 1991, the Anti-Narcotics Task Force (ANTF), comprising 388 personnel drawn primarily from the Pakistan Army, was formed as a specialized unit under the NCD to focus on interdiction and enforcement.[10][11] On February 21, 1995, the PNCB and ANTF were merged to create the consolidated ANF, marking the formal inception of the agency as a dedicated federal entity for combating narcotics smuggling, cultivation, and abuse nationwide. This merger aimed to streamline operations fragmented across civilian and military components, enhancing coordination in a context where Pakistan served as a major transit route for heroin and hashish from Afghanistan. The Anti-Narcotics Force Act, 1997 (Act No. XXXIII of 1997), subsequently provided the statutory basis for the ANF's constitution, empowering it as a paramilitary force with authority for arrests, seizures, and investigations under a unified command structure led by a Director General typically holding the rank of Major General from the armed forces.[12][13] Since its establishment, the ANF has undergone structural evolution to adapt to escalating threats, including synthetic drugs and money laundering tied to trafficking networks. Initially operating under the Ministry of Interior, it gained greater autonomy with the creation of the dedicated Ministry of Narcotics Control in August 2017, which elevated narcotics enforcement as a national priority amid reports of over 6.7 million drug users in Pakistan by 2013 estimates from agency surveys. Reforms have included bolstering intelligence capabilities, expanding regional directorates (e.g., in Balochistan for border interdiction), and integrating military staffing at senior levels to leverage discipline and logistics expertise, as the ANF maintains a civilian law enforcement mandate but draws on paramilitary resources for high-risk operations.[5][11] Further adaptations reflect international partnerships and policy updates; the National Narcotics Policy of 2010, revised to counter global shifts like increased precursor chemical smuggling, emphasized prevention alongside enforcement, leading to enhanced airport and seaport screening protocols that resulted in seizures exceeding 100 tons of narcotics annually by the mid-2010s. Recent enhancements, such as specialized training for over 250 personnel on emerging threats like fentanyl precursors (completed in 2024 via UNDP collaboration) and capacity-building in Balochistan through UNODC programs targeting Afghan-border routes, underscore the ANF's shift toward proactive, technology-aided interdiction amid evolving cartel tactics. These developments have positioned the ANF as Pakistan's lead agency in a multi-agency framework, though challenges persist due to porous borders and limited provincial coordination.[14][15][6]Organizational Structure
The Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) is headquartered in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, and operates under the administrative control of the Ministry of Narcotics Control. The organization is headed by a Director General, a position filled by a two-star general officer from the Pakistan Army on deputation, providing military oversight to its counter-narcotics mandate. As of June 2025, Major General Abdul Moeed, Hilal-i-Imtiaz (Military), serves in this role.[16][17] The Director General is assisted by several Deputy Directors General, who manage core functional domains such as enforcement, intelligence, and resource allocation; these roles are often assigned to senior civil officers, including from the Police Service of Pakistan. For example, Inspector General Sohail Habib Tajik held the position of Deputy Director General from August 2023, focusing on operational coordination.[18][19] Specialized directorates at headquarters include the Intelligence Directorate, responsible for gathering and analyzing narcotics-related data, and enforcement branches handling interdiction planning.[20] ANF maintains a decentralized field structure through regional directorates in key locations, including Rawalpindi (North), Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar, and Quetta, established to cover provincial jurisdictions and facilitate localized operations.[21][3] These directorates, each led by a Regional Director, oversee sub-units for airports, seaports, and border points, integrating specialized assets like canine detection teams and marine interdiction groups to target smuggling routes. Additional regional expansions have supported coverage in areas like Multan and Hyderabad, enhancing nationwide enforcement capacity.[10]Governing Laws and Charter
The Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) operates under the framework of the Anti-Narcotics Force Act, 1997 (Act No. III of 1997), enacted by the Parliament of Pakistan on April 14, 1997, which establishes the Force as a federal entity dedicated to combating narcotics-related offenses.[12] This Act merges prior entities, including the Pakistan Narcotics Control Board established on March 8, 1973, and the Anti-Narcotics Task Force formed under Ordinance LXXVI of 1994, designating ANF as their successor for continuity in operations and assets.[12] The Federal Government holds authority to constitute the Force, appoint its Director-General, and define its hierarchical structure, with the Director-General exercising powers equivalent to an Inspector-General of Police and, where applicable, Armed Forces regulations for court-martial proceedings.[12] The Act's charter delineates ANF's core mandate in Section 5, empowering it to inquire into, investigate, and prosecute offenses connected with the preparation, production, manufacture, transportation, purchase, sale, import, export, or possession of narcotic drugs, as defined under the Control of Narcotic Substances Ordinance, 1996 (later consolidated into the Control of Narcotic Substances Act, 1997).[12] Additional duties include tracing, freezing, and forfeiting assets derived from narcotics trafficking; assisting law enforcement agencies in related matters; maintaining international liaison for narcotics control; coordinating training programs and the eradication of illicit poppy cultivation; and undertaking any other tasks assigned by the Federal Government.[12] ANF personnel possess extensive powers under Section 6, akin to those of police officers, including warrantless arrests by Inspectors, searches, seizures, and the ability to summon witnesses or documents, extendable across Pakistan and extraterritorially as needed.[12] Complementing the ANF Act, the Control of Narcotic Substances Act, 1997 (Act No. XXV of 1997), assented to on July 11, 1997, provides the substantive legal prohibitions on narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances, including bans on their production, possession, trafficking, and transshipment, with penalties ranging from imprisonment to death for large-scale offenses.[22] ANF serves as the primary enforcement agency under this Act, with exclusive jurisdiction over federal narcotics investigations, though it coordinates with provincial authorities and other federal bodies.[23] Subsequent amendments, such as the Control of Narcotic Substances (Amendment) Act, 2022, have refined sentencing guidelines and quantity thresholds for offenses, enhancing ANF's prosecutorial framework without altering its foundational charter.[24] The Director-General may delegate powers to subordinates via written orders, ensuring operational flexibility, while Section 13 affirms ANF's nationwide and international operational scope.[12] These laws collectively position ANF as a specialized paramilitary force, independent in narcotics enforcement but subject to Federal Government oversight, with no provisions for political interference in investigations explicitly barred to maintain impartiality.[12]Historical Context
Pre-ANF Precursors
Prior to the creation of a centralized federal anti-narcotics agency, enforcement against illicit drugs in Pakistan relied on decentralized efforts by provincial police departments, customs services, and excise authorities, which lacked specialized coordination and resources for cross-border trafficking challenges.[25] The Pakistan Narcotics Control Board (PNCB) was established in 1973 with five regional directorates to address international obligations under United Nations narcotics conventions, focusing on regulatory control, licensing for licit opium production, and basic interdiction.[10] The PNCB operated under the Ministry of Finance initially, emphasizing administrative oversight rather than robust field enforcement, which limited its effectiveness against rising smuggling from Afghanistan following the 1979 Soviet invasion.[26] In 1989, the Narcotics Control Division (NCD) was formed within the federal government, with the PNCB as its attached department, marking the first dedicated bureaucratic structure for policy formulation and coordination amid escalating heroin trade volumes estimated at hundreds of tons annually transiting Pakistan.[27] This era saw initial demand reduction programs, but enforcement remained fragmented, prompting the need for militarized intervention. To bolster operational capacity, the Anti-Narcotics Task Force (ANTF) was created in December 1991, comprising 388 personnel drawn primarily from the Pakistan Army and attached to the NCD, aimed at high-risk interdiction and intelligence gathering in trafficking hotspots.[28] The ANTF represented a shift toward paramilitary tactics but operated with limited autonomy and integration, highlighting the precursors' inadequacies in addressing sophisticated smuggling networks that evaded provincial jurisdictions.Formation and Early Operations (1990s)
The Anti-Narcotics Task Force (ANTF), a precursor to the full ANF, was established in December 1991 as an attached department of the Narcotics Control Division, initially comprising 388 personnel drawn from the Pakistan Army to address escalating narcotics trafficking amid Pakistan's role as a primary transit route for Afghan-sourced opium and heroin.[10] This formation followed Pakistan's adoption of a national Anti-Narcotics Policy in 1993, which emphasized coordinated enforcement to curb production, trafficking, and abuse, responding to surging opium yields in neighboring Afghanistan that reached 180 tons by 1990. On February 21, 1995, the ANTF merged with the Pakistan Narcotics Control Board (PNCB)—a civilian-led body established earlier for regulatory oversight—to create the unified Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) as a federal paramilitary entity under the Narcotics Control Division.[10][28] The merger sought to consolidate investigative, interdiction, and prosecutorial functions previously fragmented between military and civilian components, enabling more effective operations against smuggling networks exploiting Pakistan's porous borders and coastal routes. Initial ANF activities prioritized intelligence gathering, border patrols, and raids on known trafficking hubs, though resource constraints limited scope in the immediate post-formation phase. The Anti-Narcotics Force Act of 1997 formalized ANF's mandate, designating it as the successor to ANTF and PNCB with powers to investigate, seize assets, and prosecute narcotics-related offenses nationwide, including delegation of certain operational authority to entities like the Frontier Corps and Pakistan Rangers.[23][12] Early operations in the mid-to-late 1990s yielded mixed results; for instance, 1996 saw reported declines in narcotics and precursor chemical seizures compared to prior years, attributed partly to shifting trafficking patterns, but ANF advanced in freezing drug-linked assets and disrupting financial flows. By 1998, ANF provided data on ongoing seizures and arrests through October, reflecting sustained interdiction efforts despite challenges from entrenched corruption and regional instability. These years laid groundwork for ANF's expansion, focusing on high-value targets while Pakistan maintained top global rankings in hashish and heroin intercepts.Expansion and Reforms (2000s–Present)
In the early 2000s, the Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) benefited from Pakistan's declaration as poppy-free in 2000–2001, shifting focus toward interdiction and international transit routes amid rising Afghan opium production. This period saw enhanced seizures, with ANF estimating that 36% of heroin and morphine from Afghanistan transited Pakistan, contributing to 27 tons seized in 2005 alone.[29] Reforms intensified with the 2010 Anti-Narcotics Policy, which addressed evolving global narcotics dynamics and domestic supply-demand imbalances through improved coordination and enforcement mechanisms.[14] The 2019 National Anti-Narcotics Policy further reformed institutional capacities, expanding the ANF Academy's role in delivering specialized drug law enforcement training to ANF personnel and other law enforcement agencies.[30] Organizational expansions included scaling drug demand reduction infrastructure; by 2016, ANF's existing 145-bed treatment facilities in Islamabad, Quetta, and Karachi were augmented with 173 additional beds in Karachi, Sukkur, and other locations to support rehabilitation efforts.[31] Technological and regulatory reforms emerged with the Precursor Management System, enabling ANF directorates and police to conduct ground checks on chemical precursor imports for illicit drug production.[32] Recent developments emphasize international partnerships and operational intensification. Collaborations with UNODC have bolstered information-sharing for counter-trafficking, including a 2025 initiative for unified responses against organized crime networks.[33] [34] In September 2025, ANF launched a large-scale poppy eradication campaign in Balochistan with local authorities, targeting cultivation resurgence.[35] These efforts reflect ongoing adaptation to porous borders and evolving smuggling tactics, though challenges like financial irregularities—such as over Rs550 million detected in 2025 audits—underscore internal accountability needs.[36]Mandate and Core Functions
Primary Responsibilities
The primary responsibilities of the Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) encompass inquiring into and investigating offenses related to narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances under the Control of Narcotic Substances Act, 1997, as amended.[23] This includes suppressing the production, processing, transportation, import, export, purchase, sale, possession, and smuggling of such substances, with a focus on eradicating illicit cultivation of poppy and dismantling clandestine laboratories.[25] The ANF is empowered to trace, freeze, and seize assets derived from or used in narcotics-related crimes, ensuring financial flows supporting trafficking are disrupted.[23] Coordination forms a cornerstone of ANF's mandate, involving assistance and advisory support to provincial and federal enforcement agencies on narcotics matters, alongside operational synchronization to avoid jurisdictional overlaps.[10] The agency maintains a national data bank on offenders, offenses, and trafficking patterns, collecting, analyzing, and disseminating intelligence to inform policy and enforcement.[37] International liaison is prioritized, including collaboration with foreign law enforcement to intercept cross-border smuggling routes, particularly along Pakistan's porous frontiers used for heroin and opium transit from Afghanistan.[38] In parallel, the ANF addresses demand-side issues by implementing prevention programs, awareness campaigns, and rehabilitation initiatives to curb domestic consumption, reflecting its dual role in supply suppression and societal protection as outlined in the National Anti-Narcotics Policy 2019.[39] These efforts extend to precursor chemical controls and regulatory oversight to prevent diversion into illicit production.[40] Overall, the ANF operates as the lead federal entity for narcotics control, succeeding prior bodies like the Pakistan Narcotics Control Board, with exclusive authority over federal investigations into major trafficking networks.[11]Intelligence, Investigation, and Enforcement
The Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) conducts intelligence operations primarily through an intelligence-led approach, utilizing human sources, surveillance, and data analytics to map narcotics trafficking routes and networks within Pakistan and across borders.[30] As the designated point of contact for international cooperation, ANF exchanges operational intelligence with drug liaison officers from foreign embassies and agencies, facilitating the disruption of transnational smuggling syndicates.[38] This includes enhanced intelligence-sharing protocols with Gulf Cooperation Council countries to target drug flows originating from Afghanistan and transiting Pakistan's porous frontiers.[41] Domestic coordination occurs via the Inter-Agency Task Force on counternarcotics, chaired by ANF, which integrates inputs from military, police, and customs entities to prioritize high-threat targets.[5] Investigations by ANF emphasize forensic evidence collection and scientific analysis to build prosecutable cases under the Control of Narcotic Substances Act, 1997.[25] The agency employs modern forensic techniques, such as chemical profiling of seized substances and digital tracking of financial trails linked to traffickers, complemented by meticulous data analysis from seized communications and logistics records.[42] These methods enable the identification of precursor chemical diversions and money laundering schemes supporting narcotics operations, with ANF maintaining specialized units for in-depth probes into syndicate structures.[30] Collaboration with international partners, including forensic exchanges, strengthens evidentiary standards to counter defense claims in court.[42] Enforcement actions involve rapid-response interdictions, raids, and maritime operations, often in joint efforts with the Pakistan Navy and other forces, resulting in significant seizures and arrests. In August 2025, ANF and the Navy intercepted 1,250 kilograms of illicit drugs valued at $38 million off Balochistan's coast in an intelligence-based operation.[43] Recent enforcement has yielded 991.593 kilograms of narcotics seized, alongside 47 arrests including three foreigners, disrupting supply chains worth $114.065 million.[44] With U.S. support through the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, ANF reported seizing 6 metric tons of morphine and heroin plus 7.9 metric tons of opium in fiscal year activities, underscoring its role in high-volume supply reduction.[45] In September 2025, ANF launched a major poppy eradication campaign in Balochistan, targeting cultivation sites in coordination with local authorities to enforce cultivation bans.[35] These operations leverage paramilitary capabilities for high-risk executions, prioritizing trafficker apprehensions to dismantle networks rather than mere seizures.[46]Interdiction Operations
The Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) executes interdiction operations to disrupt narcotics smuggling routes, targeting consignments at Pakistan's international airports, seaports, land borders, and inland transit points, with a focus on heroin, hashish, opium, and synthetic drugs originating primarily from Afghanistan or destined for international markets.[47] These efforts rely on intelligence-led tactics, including surveillance, informant networks, risk profiling of passengers and cargo, advanced scanning equipment, and narcotics detection dogs, often in coordination with agencies like the Pakistan Customs Service, Frontier Corps, and maritime forces.[48] Operations extend to the destruction of illicit opium poppy crops, particularly in Balochistan province, where joint campaigns with local authorities aim to curb cultivation at the source.[35] ANF's interdiction activities have yielded substantial results in recent years, with nationwide operations since September 2023 resulting in the seizure of 1,043 metric tons of assorted narcotics and the arrest of 1,612 suspects involved in trafficking.[49] In a series of intelligence-based raids conducted across multiple cities on October 18, 2025, ANF executed seven major operations, confiscating drugs valued at over Rs. 18.5 million (approximately US 66,000) and apprehending six traffickers, including seizures of hashish and heroin hidden in vehicles and parcels. Earlier press releases indicate cumulative seizures in select periods exceeding 9,000 kilograms of drugs valued at US 594 million, alongside dozens of arrests and vehicle impoundments during counter-narcotics sweeps.[50] Joint interdiction efforts, such as maritime operations with the Pakistan Navy, have intercepted smuggling vessels carrying contraband, demonstrating ANF's role in multi-agency responses to adaptive trafficking syndicates that exploit porous borders and shift routes in response to enforcement pressures.[48] These operations prioritize high-value targets, including international consignments bound for Europe and the Middle East, though challenges persist due to the volume of cross-border traffic and evolving concealment methods employed by cartels.[51]Operational Strategies
SPEAR Framework
The SPEAR Framework constitutes the core operational strategy of Pakistan's Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) for drug supply reduction, emphasizing a multipronged approach to enforcement and interdiction. Implemented as part of the National Anti-Narcotics Policy, it integrates intelligence-driven actions with inter-agency and international collaboration to disrupt narcotics networks.[10] Key components of the SPEAR Framework include:- Surveillance and Intelligence Acquisition: ANF prioritizes real-time monitoring of smuggling routes, particularly along Pakistan's porous borders with Afghanistan and Iran, utilizing human intelligence, technical surveillance, and data analytics to identify traffickers and precursor chemical flows. This forms the foundational layer, enabling preemptive disruptions of opium and heroin consignments originating from Afghan poppy cultivation.[10]
- Proactive Prevention and Protection: Measures focus on securing airports, seaports, and land borders through risk-based screening, canine units, and infrastructure hardening to prevent narcotics entry. For instance, enhanced checks at Karachi and Gwadar ports target maritime heroin shipments, reducing vulnerability to transnational syndicates.
- Effective Enforcement: Direct interdiction operations involve raids, arrests, and seizures, supported by specialized ANF directorates for investigation and prosecution under the Control of Narcotic Substances Act, 1997. Enforcement targets high-value assets like drug labs and financial laundering, with over 100,000 arrests and tons of narcotics seized annually in recent operations.[10]
- Alliances, Assistance, and Cooperation: The framework mandates coordination via the Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF) with entities like the Frontier Corps, Pakistan Customs, and international partners such as the UNODC and DEA, facilitating joint operations and capacity-building. This includes sharing intelligence on Afghan opiate flows and donor-funded training to bolster ANF's 5,000+ personnel.[38]
Policy Review and Coordination Mechanisms
The Anti-Narcotics Force coordinates narcotics control efforts through the Inter-Agency Task Force on Narcotics Control, which it chairs to align interdiction operations among federal agencies like the Pakistan Customs Service, Frontier Corps, and provincial law enforcement bodies.[52] This mechanism facilitates real-time intelligence sharing and joint operations to disrupt trafficking networks, with regular meetings—such as the 19th session held on July 30, 2025—emphasizing unified strategies for a drug-free Pakistan.[53] The task force addresses gaps in provincial-federal collaboration, enabling targeted responses to evolving threats like precursor chemical smuggling and cross-border heroin flows.[14] Policy review is anchored in the National Anti-Narcotics Policy of 2019, which established a high-level committee under the Prime Minister's chairmanship to periodically assess implementation progress, evaluate outcomes against objectives like supply reduction and demand mitigation, and recommend adjustments based on empirical data from seizures and prevalence surveys.[30] This body includes representatives from the Ministry of Narcotics Control, ANF, and provincial anti-narcotics departments, ensuring accountability through annual reporting on metrics such as drug seizure volumes (e.g., over 140 tons of narcotics confiscated by ANF in fiscal year 2023-2024) and inter-agency efficacy.[25] Reviews incorporate feedback from operational data, highlighting needs like enhanced border monitoring, though critics note persistent challenges in provincial resource allocation.[54] Recent enhancements include the launch of the National Counter Narcotics Coordination Centre (NCNC) in September 2025, aimed at centralizing data analytics and fostering sustainable inter-agency protocols through UNODC-supported workshops.[55][56] These mechanisms prioritize unified national responses, with ANF leading efforts to integrate provincial strategies, as evidenced by district-level security plans discussed in 2025 coordination sessions.[33] Despite these structures, implementation gaps persist due to varying provincial capacities, underscoring the need for mandatory compliance frameworks.[57]Demand Reduction Initiatives
Prevention and Awareness Campaigns
The Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) of Pakistan conducts prevention and awareness campaigns as part of its Drug Demand Reduction (DDR) directorate, established through the Drug Abuse Prevention Resource Centre in 1998, which focuses on educating the public, particularly youth, about the risks of narcotics use and promoting zero-tolerance strategies.[39] These initiatives emphasize community engagement, school-based programs, and media outreach to curb demand by highlighting health, social, and economic harms of drug abuse, aligning with national policies on harm minimization.[42] Key activities include anti-drug walks, rallies, seminars, and lectures targeting educational institutions and local communities. For instance, ANF organizes annual awareness events tied to the International Day Against Drug Abuse, such as the 2024 campaign in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, which featured public sensitization drives across districts to educate on prevention tactics.[58] In Balochistan, a 2025 counter-narcotics campaign included youth-focused lectures at institutions like Government Degree College for Girls in Chaman, aiming to deter initiation through discussions on addiction's consequences.[59] Similarly, sessions at Army Public School in Landi Kotal in September 2025 engaged students with interactive content on drug risks.[60] A prominent effort is the National Counter Narcotics Campaign in educational institutes, incorporating sanitization drives that combine awareness with detection; one such operation across 235 universities identified 31 traffickers and seized 140 kg of drugs while disseminating prevention materials.[61] ANF's North Region also hosts youth conventions, theater plays, and drug-burning ceremonies to reinforce messaging, often in collaboration with local authorities to reach vulnerable populations.[62] These programs prioritize empirical outreach, such as media campaigns via ANF's dedicated cell, to foster long-term behavioral shifts against narcotics consumption.[10]Treatment and Rehabilitation Programs
The Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) operates Model Addicts Treatment and Rehabilitation Centres (MATRCs) as a core element of its demand reduction efforts, focusing on comprehensive recovery for drug-dependent individuals. These facilities deliver free detoxification, psychological counseling, social reintegration support, accommodation, and nutrition, targeting the biological, psychological, and social dimensions of addiction to foster a sustained drug-free lifestyle.[63] Unlike many Pakistani treatment sites that limit services to basic detoxification, ANF's MATRCs emphasize long-term rehabilitation and post-treatment job placement to mitigate relapse risks.[39] ANF launched its initial MATRCs in Islamabad and Quetta in July 2004, with each starting as 20-bed facilities; the Islamabad center expanded to 45 beds by July 2007 to accommodate growing demand.[39] Subsequent developments include the Benazir Shaheed ANF MATRC in Lyari, Karachi, operational since at least 2019 and providing specialized care at Mirpur Road, and a Manghopir facility inaugurated in May 2023 through federal-provincial collaboration.[64][65] In September 2019, a ministerial visit to the Islamabad MATRC documented over 36 active patients, underscoring operational scale amid pledges for further expansions.[66] These programs align with the National Anti-Narcotics Policy of 2019, which mandates ANF involvement in scaling accessible treatment, care, and reintegration services nationwide, including mandatory addiction screening and care for new prisoners.[40] ANF coordinates with international partners, such as U.S. initiatives supporting rehabilitation infrastructure, to enhance capacity in a context of rising opioid and psychotropic substance dependence.[67] Empirical outcomes remain under-documented in public reports, with ANF prioritizing holistic recovery over isolated metrics, though centers like those in three major locations offer complimentary full-spectrum services to address systemic gaps in Pakistan's addiction treatment landscape.[68]International Engagement
Bilateral and Multilateral Agreements
The Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) of Pakistan fulfills international obligations under key United Nations drug control conventions, to which Pakistan is a signatory, including the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs (1961), the Convention on Psychotropic Substances (1971), and the United Nations Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (1988).[38] These multilateral frameworks mandate cooperation on controlling narcotic production, trade, and diversion of precursor chemicals, with ANF serving as Pakistan's primary implementing agency for enforcement and liaison.[38] ANF also represents Pakistan in regional and global forums such as the Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND) and the Paris Pact Initiative, facilitating multilateral intelligence exchange and policy alignment on cross-border trafficking routes. On the bilateral front, ANF coordinates numerous memoranda of understanding (MOUs) and agreements, with 36 such instruments signed since 2004 to enhance cooperation against narcotics trafficking, abuse, and related money laundering. Key partners include the United States, under a bilateral mutual legal assistance treaty enabling joint counternarcotics operations and evidence sharing; Iran, with an October 2025 intelligence cooperation agreement targeting cross-border smuggling networks; Saudi Arabia, via a May 2025 commitment to deepen anti-narcotics efforts; and China, Russia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Kuwait, and the United Kingdom for operational liaison and drug liaison officer interactions.[52][69][70][38] Additional MOUs cover Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Nigeria, and Egypt, focusing on extradition, precursor control, and joint interdiction.[71] These agreements emphasize practical measures like real-time intelligence sharing, border monitoring, and capacity-building training, particularly along high-risk routes from Afghanistan.[38] In 2025, ANF hosted a Pakistan-Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) conference to strengthen regional bilateral ties with Gulf states on drug interdiction and demand reduction.[72] Such engagements have supported operations dismantling transnational networks, though effectiveness depends on sustained implementation amid varying partner commitments.[54]Joint Operations and Capacity Building
The Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) of Pakistan engages in joint operations with international partners to interdict narcotics trafficking, particularly in maritime and border regions. In October 2025, ANF collaborated with the Pakistan Navy in an intelligence-based counter-narcotics operation in the North Arabian Sea, seizing approximately 3,000 kilograms of drugs valued at over $970 million, which was interdicted under the Saudi-led Combined Task Force 150 framework aimed at disrupting illicit flows by non-state actors.[73] Such operations extend to intelligence sharing and coordinated actions with Gulf states, where ANF participates in joint interdictions targeting smuggling networks linked to transnational crime.[47] Additionally, in discussions with Iran in October 2025, ANF emphasized implementing joint border patrols and dismantling smuggling networks through enhanced bilateral intelligence exchange.[74] Capacity building efforts for ANF are supported by multilateral organizations and bilateral donors, focusing on training, equipment, and institutional strengthening. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has conducted multiple initiatives, including operational capacity enhancement in Balochistan province to improve counter-narcotics enforcement through specialized workshops and technical assistance.[6] In June 2024, UNODC backed a national workshop on intelligence coordination, involving ANF and other agencies to unify responses against drug trafficking.[41] The U.S. Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL) has trained over 1,000 ANF and related officials at the ANF Academy in counternarcotics techniques, emphasizing interdiction and investigation skills.[67] Bilateral support from the United Kingdom includes the inauguration of a Centre of Excellence in October 2025 for transnational organized crime, providing ANF with training in law enforcement best practices and digital case management systems launched in September 2025 to streamline evidence handling.[75][8] The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) trained over 250 ANF personnel nationwide in July 2024 on emerging drug-related security threats, including synthetic narcotics and trafficking trends.[15] These programs, coordinated via ANF's international liaison role, aim to align Pakistan's capabilities with global standards while addressing regional vulnerabilities.[38]Achievements and Empirical Impact
Key Seizures and Arrest Statistics
In 2023, the Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) of Pakistan seized 618 metric tons of drugs and prohibited chemicals, valued at billions of rupees, through nationwide operations targeting trafficking networks.[76] This included significant quantities of heroin, hashish, opium, and synthetic narcotics, reflecting intensified interdiction efforts at borders, airports, and sea routes.[76] For the fiscal year July 2022 to June 2023, ANF operations resulted in 1,596 registered cases and 1,568 arrests, with seizures encompassing opium, heroin, hashish, and other controlled substances in kilograms and liters.[77] Notable breakdowns included substantial opium recoveries, though exact subtype totals varied by province and smuggling modality, such as vehicle concealments and courier services.[77] In 2024, ANF reported periodic hauls, such as 9,280.981 kg of assorted drugs valued at US$594.584 million across 58 operations, leading to 48 arrests including four females and the impoundment of 22 vehicles.[50] Another intelligence-led effort in July 2024 yielded over 1,076 kg of narcotics, with 33 suspects apprehended in coordinated raids spanning Islamabad, Rawalpindi, and other districts.[78] Key individual busts underscore operational impact: in one 2024 operation, ANF confiscated 2,830.340 kg of drugs worth US$207.806 million and arrested 40 individuals, including eight females.[79] Earlier in the year, 2,053.463 kg valued at US$159.701 million was seized, with 33 arrests including one woman and one Afghan national.[80] These figures, drawn from ANF operational logs, highlight a focus on high-value interdictions amid persistent transit challenges from Afghanistan.[50]Measurable Outcomes on Drug Flows
The Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) has recorded fluctuating but substantial drug seizures annually, serving as a primary measurable indicator of disruptions to illicit flows through Pakistan, a key transit corridor for approximately 40% of Afghan-origin heroin and hashish destined for international markets. Between 2020 and 2023, ANF seizures totaled 118 metric tons in 2020, 79 tons in 2021, 70 tons in 2022, and 153 tons in 2023, encompassing organic narcotics like opium and hashish alongside rising synthetic drugs such as methamphetamine. In the fiscal year July 2023 to June 2024, ANF operations yielded 138 metric tons of hashish, 16 tons of opium, 11 tons of heroin, and 12 tons of methamphetamine, alongside smaller quantities of cocaine and amphetamines, through 2,978 operations resulting in 3,544 arrests. These interceptions, often intelligence-driven and including 36 international collaborations, disrupted 16 trafficking organizations and seized over 39 metric tons in joint efforts, with U.S.-supported operations alone accounting for significant portions like 5.4 tons of heroin and 6.9 tons of methamphetamine.[26][81] Despite these volumes, which represent a fraction of estimated transit—historically 45% of Afghan opiates routing through Pakistan prior to production declines—direct causal impact on overall drug flows remains limited and difficult to quantify due to unobservable total trafficking volumes and adaptive smuggling tactics. Post-2022 Taliban opium ban in Afghanistan, which reduced national production to 433 tons of opium in 2024 from prior peaks exceeding 6,000 tons, opiate seizures in Pakistan declined by up to 70% for opium and 20% for heroin, reflecting broader supply constraints rather than ANF-specific efficacy; synthetic drug seizures, however, surged 95% for methamphetamine, indicating shifting flows toward precursors transiting from China and India via Pakistan to Afghanistan for processing. ANF efforts have elevated street-level interdictions, potentially increasing trafficker risks and costs, but analyses note that such seizures often fail to target kingpins, allowing networks to adapt and maintain supply, with persistent porous borders and corruption undermining sustained reductions. Heroin prices in Pakistan rose from approximately US$2,200 per kilogram in 2021 amid global supply shifts, but no verified data attributes this directly to ANF actions over production dynamics.[82][83][81][51]| Year | Total Seizures (Metric Tons) | Key Notes on Flows |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 118 | Peak amid pre-ban Afghan production; focus on organic drugs.[26] |
| 2021 | 79 | Decline in organic seizures; synthetics rising.[26] |
| 2022 | 70 | Continued dip; border vulnerabilities persist.[26] |
| 2023 | 153 | Sharp rebound, including precursors; 2024 partial data shows 177 tons total narcotics.[26][47] |