Pakistan's FIA Cracks Down: 214 Officers Punished in Major Anti-Corruption Drive

Pakistan's Federal Investigation Agency has taken disciplinary action against 214 officials over four months for offenses including human trafficking, corruption, and inefficiency. The crackdown follows the establishment of a new internal accountability directorate and was spurred by deadly migrant boat incidents linked to smuggling networks. Key reforms include delegating disciplinary powers to zonal directors and creating an online module to track investigations for transparency. The consolidation of all accountability processes under a single directorate aims to prevent power concentration and improve coordination with the interior ministry.

Key Points: FIA Punishes 214 Officers in 4 Months Over Corruption, Trafficking

  • 214 officers disciplined
  • Internal anti-corruption reforms
  • Link to human smuggling tragedies
  • New Directorate of Internal Accountability
  • Online case tracking system
3 min read

Pakistan: 214 FIA officers punished in four months amid entrenched corruption, human trafficking concerns

Pakistan's Federal Investigation Agency disciplines 214 officials for human trafficking, corruption, and inefficiency amid major internal reforms and accountability push.

"a strict accountability mechanism was introduced in the aftermath of deadly boat incidents - Senior FIA Official"

Islamabad, January 2

Pakistan's Federal Investigation Agency has taken disciplinary action against 214 of its officials over the past four months in connection with cases of human trafficking, corruption, indiscipline and inefficiency, according to senior agency officials, Dawn reported on Friday.

The actions were taken amid a surge in complaints related to human smuggling and graft within the agency.

A senior FIA official said the crackdown followed the introduction of internal reforms, including the establishment of the Directorate of Internal Accountability (DIA) at FIA Headquarters in August 2025, as reported by Dawn.

Similar accountability units were also set up at the zonal level under the supervision of zonal directors.

The official stated that a strict accountability mechanism was introduced in the aftermath of deadly boat incidents in Europe and Africa, where a large number of Pakistani nationals lost their lives, adding that high-level enquiries later revealed the involvement of some FIA personnel in human smuggling networks, Dawn reported.

The official also cited a November 2025 International Monetary Fund report titled "Pakistan: Governance and Corruption Diagnostic", which highlighted corruption in public-sector institutions as a major cause of inefficiency.

To strengthen oversight, FIA Director General Riffat Mukhtar Raja delegated accountability powers to Additional Director Generals of the North and South Zones and to zonal directors, enabling them to take disciplinary action against officers up to Grade 16, as reported by Dawn.

In addition, the FIA developed an online accountability module to monitor the progress of enquiries from the complaint stage through disposal and appeal.

The official noted that the system allows senior officers to track investigations internally and ensure transparency.

As a result of these measures, departmental enquiries were conducted against officials ranging from constables to deputy directors. The official said around 20 per cent of punishments were related to immigration complaints, another 20 per cent involved faulty investigations, while nearly 40 per cent were imposed for indiscipline and inefficiency, as reported by Dawn.

A major reform involved consolidating all stages of accountability -- including preliminary, fact-finding and departmental enquiries -- under the DIA, removing them from the FIA's human resource wing. This, the official said, was done to avoid the concentration of powers and to give greater institutional importance to accountability.

Previously, fragmented structures made it difficult to track complaints and analyse data effectively, the official noted. The creation of the DIA has addressed these shortcomings and strengthened coordination between the FIA Director General and the Ministry of Interior and Narcotics Control, Dawn reported.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
Interesting to see the IMF report being cited. Corruption is a cancer that holds back entire nations. If Pakistan can get a handle on this within its own investigation agency, it might set a precedent. The online module for tracking complaints sounds like a good tech solution.
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Arjun K
Only 214 officers punished? For an agency that size, and with such deep-rooted issues mentioned, this seems like a very small number. This feels like tokenism. The real test will be if they go after the big fish and the political patrons of these networks. 🤔
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Priyanka N
As an Indian, it's concerning to read about FIA's involvement in human trafficking. This isn't just Pakistan's internal matter; it affects regional stability. Smuggling networks often cross borders. Hope the new DIA brings some genuine transparency and cooperation.
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Karthik V
Consolidating accountability under one directorate (DIA) is a smart move. In our experience in India, fragmented systems lead to blame games and no one is held responsible. The key is whether this body has real teeth and independence from political interference.
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Michael C
The statistic that 40% of punishments were for "indiscipline and inefficiency" is telling. It shows the rot is cultural and systemic, not just about a few bad apples taking bribes. Reforming that work culture is a much harder, longer-term battle. Wishing them luck.

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