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By Haroon Rashid
BBC Urdu service, Islamabad
BBC NEWS | World | South Asia | Pakistan reveals defence spending
The military has kept a lid for years on how it spends its money
Pakistan's newly-elected civilian government has decided to make the country's defence budget public for the first time in 40 years.
Defence spending for the year 2008-2009 is set at 302.5bn rupees ($4.5bn), an increase of 7% but below inflation.
It is the first time defence spending has been publicised since 1965 when war with India led to it being classified.
Pakistan and India have been arch-rivals in the subcontinent since it was partitioned in 1947.
'Into the open'
Details of defence expenditure were announced in Wednesday's budget session of parliament.
The government set the defence budget at 296bn rupees - an increase of 7% and down from 11% last year.
This figure excludes 5bn rupees for defence development and 1.5bn rupees for defence production.
The decrease in real terms in defence expenditure and its declassification was announced by Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gillani in parliament a few days ago.
"We will support the decision to bring the defence budget into the open," Omar Ayub, former finance minister and leader of the opposition PML-Q party, told the BBC.
"However disguising some of the funds as everyday expenses to protect strategic plans should be permissable."
Army consent
Experts say the Pakistan army has been willing in the past to reveal what it spends on fuel and salaries.
But, they say, it is not so willing to come clean about its purchase of arms and other equipment worth billions of rupees.
In the past, several cases regarding kickbacks and misuse of funds have come to light in these transactions.
However, this time the government says the budget details are being presented with the consent of present army chief Gen Ashfaq Kiyani and the defence secretary.
Naveed Qamar, Pakistan's finance minister, admitted that no all details were not presented in the first budget session.
But, he insisted that they would be made available before the budget was debated in parliament.
The PPP and the PML-N, the major partners in Pakistan's current government, had made it a major issue in their Charter of Democracy agreement.
Pakistan's defence budget has often been the subject of criticism due to non-accountability.
That may decline due to the new mechanism, but the demand for greater transparency remains.
BBC Urdu service, Islamabad
BBC NEWS | World | South Asia | Pakistan reveals defence spending
The military has kept a lid for years on how it spends its money
Pakistan's newly-elected civilian government has decided to make the country's defence budget public for the first time in 40 years.
Defence spending for the year 2008-2009 is set at 302.5bn rupees ($4.5bn), an increase of 7% but below inflation.
It is the first time defence spending has been publicised since 1965 when war with India led to it being classified.
Pakistan and India have been arch-rivals in the subcontinent since it was partitioned in 1947.
'Into the open'
Details of defence expenditure were announced in Wednesday's budget session of parliament.
The government set the defence budget at 296bn rupees - an increase of 7% and down from 11% last year.
This figure excludes 5bn rupees for defence development and 1.5bn rupees for defence production.
The decrease in real terms in defence expenditure and its declassification was announced by Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gillani in parliament a few days ago.
"We will support the decision to bring the defence budget into the open," Omar Ayub, former finance minister and leader of the opposition PML-Q party, told the BBC.
"However disguising some of the funds as everyday expenses to protect strategic plans should be permissable."
Army consent
Experts say the Pakistan army has been willing in the past to reveal what it spends on fuel and salaries.
But, they say, it is not so willing to come clean about its purchase of arms and other equipment worth billions of rupees.
In the past, several cases regarding kickbacks and misuse of funds have come to light in these transactions.
However, this time the government says the budget details are being presented with the consent of present army chief Gen Ashfaq Kiyani and the defence secretary.
Naveed Qamar, Pakistan's finance minister, admitted that no all details were not presented in the first budget session.
But, he insisted that they would be made available before the budget was debated in parliament.
The PPP and the PML-N, the major partners in Pakistan's current government, had made it a major issue in their Charter of Democracy agreement.
Pakistan's defence budget has often been the subject of criticism due to non-accountability.
That may decline due to the new mechanism, but the demand for greater transparency remains.