Voter lists: 236% increase in female voter registration in Khyber Agency

The highest increase in the ratio of female voters per 100 male voters have been recorded in Khyber Agency.

33,463 is the number by which female registered voters exceed male registered voters in Khyber Agency. DESIGN: EMA ANIS

PESHAWAR:


Voter lists finalised by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) have shown a 236% increase in the number of female registered voters in Khyber Agency.


According to the ECP’s 2008 voters list, the total number of people registered from Khyber Agency was 194,256, with 156,973 male and 37,283 female voters. This time, there have been 142,507 new registrations.

The spike may be attributed to the increase in the number of women getting Computerised National Identity Cards (CNIC).

The total number of registered voters in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) is 1,616,601. Out of this, 1,063,807 are men and 552,794 are women.

Interestingly, this time round the highest number of female voters is in Bajaur Agency ­— 132,366. The lowest number was recorded in North Waziristan with 11,704 female voters.


From Khyber Agency a total of 336,763 registered voters comprise 211,495 males and 125,268 females. The total number of voters in Khyber Agency has increased by 73.4% since 2008.

The highest increase in the ratio of female voters per 100 male voters had also been recorded in Khyber Agency.

An ECP official told The Express Tribune, “One of the main reasons for the increase in registered voters is the fact that those who get their Computerised National Identity Cards (CNIC) made, automatically get registered with the ECP and then we verify them with the address they provide.”

He added the former government’s Benazir Income Support Programme required a valid CNIC, thus more women got their cards made and as a result the number of registered voters increased.

The ongoing military operation in Khyber Agency has left many families displaced. They are forced to live in camps and register for ration cards which also requires them to get CNICs made. This has also impacted voter registration, said an aid worker, who will be observing the electoral process.

He added law and order in Landikotal and Jamrud subdivisions of the agency is better than other areas of Fata. In these areas, women do not fear registering themselves for CNICs and casting vote.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 23rd, 2013. 
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