KARACHI: Instead of fielding local residents, major political parties have brought “outsiders” to contest the July 25 election on a high-profile but badly neglected National Assembly seat — NA-254, Central II — as their candidates are not living within the territorial limits of the constituency that houses the now sealed Nine Zero headquarters of the Altaf Hussain-led Muttahida Qaumi Movement.
While the candidates of the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal and Pakistan Peoples Party Parliamentarians are not living in the constituency but are residents of Karachi’s Central district, the candidates of the MQM-Pakistan, Pak Sarzameen Party (PSP) and Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) are not even living in the same district.
Legally, a Pakistani citizen can contest election from anywhere in the country and all he or she needs is to get his candidature proposed and seconded by two residents/registered voters of the constituency.
Seventeen in the run for the NA seat previously won by MQM with huge margins
However, it is hard to believe that an outsider candidate can grasp the voters’ issues and problems at par with someone living in the same constituency.
The decision of these parties has left a question mark on the promises their candidates are making with voters of NA-254 to solve their problems.
The parties concerned, however, tried to play down the significance of fielding a local candidate, as in their almost similar response they claimed that they had nominated “best candidates” from all over Karachi.
Over half a million voters
The sprawling NA-254 constituency comprises the areas previously part of NA-244 and NA-246, considered as an MQM stronghold as the party never lost the two seats, except in 1993 when it boycotted the polls.
Around 15 of the 22 blocks of Federal B Area, including Azizabad where Nine Zero is located, Gharibabad, Karimabad, Sharifabad, Al-Azam, parts of Liaquatabad, some localities in North Karachi are part of NA-254.
A total of 506,309 voters — 273,076 male and 233,233 female — are registered in NA-254. There are a total of 306 polling stations.
NA-254 has two provincial assembly seats — PS-125 and PS-126.
Seventeen candidates, including seven independents, are aspiring for the NA-254 constituency.
The constituency is home to people belonging to the Urdu-speaking, Sindhi, Punjabi, Pakhtun, Ismaili and Memon communities.
Afaq in the run
Mohajir Qaumi Movement-Haqiqi chief Afaq Ahmed, who is a resident of Defence Housing Authority, is also among the aspirants. The Mustafa Kamal-led PSP fielded Karachi’s deputy mayor Dr Arshad Vohra despite the fact that he lives in KDA Scheme I.
Likewise, the MQM-P fielded Shaikh Salahuddin, who lives in Gulshan-i-Iqbal, and the PTI-nominated Mohammad Aslam Khan, whose residential address as mentioned on the election commission website is of the DHA, as their respective candidates. Mr Salahuddin had returned to the National Assembly in 2013 from the old NA-244 constituency.