NA-253 Ziarat-cum-Harnai-cum-Sibbi-cum-Kohlu-cum-Dera Bugti
| NA-253 Ziarat-cum-Harnai-cum-Sibbi-cum-Kohlu-cum-Dera Bugti | |
|---|---|
| Constituency for the National Assembly of Pakistan | |
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| Region | Sibi Division |
| Electorate | 355,316 |
| Current constituency | |
| Created | 2022 |
| Party | Pakistan Muslim League (N) |
| Member(s) | Mian Khan Mondrani |
| Created from | NA-259 (Dera Bugti-cum-Kohlu-cum-Barkhan-cum-Sibbi-cum-Lehri) NA-258 (Loralai-cum-Musakhel-cum-Ziarat-cum-Duki-cum-Harnai) |
NA-253 Ziarat-cum-Harnai-cum-Sibbi-cum-Kohlu-cum-Dera Bugti (این اے-۲۵۳،زیارت-بمع-ہرنائی-بمع-سبی-بمع-کوہلو-بمع-ڈیرہ بگٹی) is a newly-created constituency for the National Assembly of Pakistan. It comprises the districts of Harnai, Sibi, Kohlu and Dera Bugti from the province of Balochistan.[1][2]
Assembly Segments
| Constituency number | Constituency | District | Current MPA | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | PB-7 Ziarat cum Harnai | Harnai | Noor Muhammad | PML(N) | |
| Ziarat | |||||
| 8 | PB-8 Sibi | Sibi | Sarfraz Chakar Domki | PPP | |
| 9 | PB-9 Kohlu | Kohlu | Changez Khan Marri | PML(N) | |
| 10 | PB-10 Dera Bugti | Dera Bugti | Sarfraz Bugti | PPP | |
Members of Parliament
2018–2023: NA-259 Dera Bugti-cum-Kohlu-cum-Barkhan-cum-Sibbi-cum-Lehri
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Shahzain Bugti | JWP | |
2024–present: NA-253 Ziarat-cum-Harnai-cum-Sibbi-cum-Kohlu-cum-Dera Bugti
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Mian Khan Mondrani | PML(N) | |
Election 2018
General elections were held on 25 July 2018.
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| JWP | Shahzain Bugti | 22,787 | 15.43 | ||
| Independent | Mir Tariq Mehmood Khan Khetran | 21,213 | 14.37 | ||
| PPP | Mir Baz Muhammad Khetran | 17,578 | 11.91 | ||
| Independent | Mian Khan Mondrani | 16,300 | 11.04 | ||
| Independent | Mir Hair Bayar Khan Domki | 12,807 | 8.67 | ||
| BAP | Mir Dostain Khan Domki | 11,930 | 8.08 | ||
| MMA | Mir Baz Muhammad | 6,113 | 4.14 | ||
| Independent | Jalnamb Khan Bugti | 5,527 | 3.74 | ||
| PTI | Babar Marghzai | 5,422 | 3.67 | ||
| Independent | Mir Liaquat Ali Khan | 5,243 | 3.55 | ||
| BNP (M) | Abdul Ghaffar | 3,016 | 2.04 | ||
| TLP | Muhammad Siddique | 2,879 | 1.95 | ||
| Independent | Attaullah | 2,840 | 1.92 | ||
| PMAP | Noor Ahmed Shah | 2,575 | 1.74 | ||
| BNM | Abdul Hayi Baloch | 2,318 | 1.57 | ||
| TLI | Faqeerullah Jan | 2,090 | 1.42 | ||
| NP | Mehrab Khan | 1,868 | 1.27 | ||
| Independent | Syed Abdul Hayi Shah Rashdi | 1,164 | 0.79 | ||
| Others | Others (thirteen candidates) | 3,970 | 2.69 | ||
| Turnout | 159,148 | 44.79 | |||
| Total valid votes | 147,640 | 92.77 | |||
| Rejected ballots | 11,508 | 7.23 | |||
| Majority | 1,574 | 1.06 | |||
| Registered electors | 355,316 | ||||
| JWP win (new seat) | |||||
Election 2024
General elections were held on 8 February 2024. Mian Khan Mondrani won the election with 54,506 votes.
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Independent | Mian Khan Mondrani | 54,506 | 23.29 | ||
| PML(N) | Mir Dostain Khan Domki | 45,532 | 19.45 | N/A | |
| JUI (F) | Naseer Ahmed Kakar | 32,600 | 13.93 | N/A | |
| JWP | Shahzain Bugti | 32,345 | 13.82 | ||
| Independent | Sadam Tareen[a] | 29,795 | 12.73 | ||
| PMAP | Habib Ur Rehman | 13,887 | 5.93 | ||
| BNP (M) | Malik Gaman Khan Marri | 9,059 | 3.87 | ||
| Others | Others (twenty three candidates) | 16,347 | 6.98 | ||
| Turnout | 241,847 | 53.35 | |||
| Total valid votes | 234,071 | 96.78 | |||
| Rejected ballots | 7,776 | 3.22 | |||
| Majority | 8,974 | 3.83 | |||
| Registered electors | 453,352 | ||||
| Independent gain from JWP | |||||
See also
Notes
- ^ Filed nomination papers as PTI candidate but ECP allowed him to run as an Independent
References
- ^ "ECP - Election Commission of Pakistan". www.ecp.gov.pk. Archived from the original on 26 November 2022. Retrieved 25 December 2022.
- ^ Final List of National Assembly Constituencies (PDF). Election Commission of Pakistan. 2018. p. 71. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 May 2018. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
- ^ "ECP – Election Commission of Pakistan". www.ecp.gov.pk. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
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